George Mason University
Fairfax, Virgina
Department of Psychology

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BACKGROUND:
Title: Human Factors and Applied Cognitive Program (HFAC) (MA, PhD). Contact: Wayne D. Gray, George Mason University, M/S 3f5; Fairfax, VA 22030; 703/993-1357; hf-ac@gmu.edu or gray@gmu.edu, http://hfac.gmu.edu/. Est: MA 1972, PsyD 1983, PhD 1990. Semester. Granted last 3 years: MA 15, PhD 8. Part time: MA yes, PhD no. Program: MA: The HFAC specialization trains students in the application of cognitive science to "real-world" problems. Students gain expertise in such areas as human-computer interaction, cognitive system engineering, surface transportation, and aviation. Faculty members help place students who do not have real-world experience in a part- or full-time practicum before completing their degree. MA students can elect to focus on either professional training or preparation for doctoral programs. Both tracks stress the analytic and empirical methodologies that are used in all phases of interactive systems design (where this is broadly defined to include any human-machine system). The power and interpretation of these techniques reside in their close ties to cognitive theory. The professional training track emphasizes course work and practical experience; the doctoral preparation track involves students in ongoing research projects. Many human factors and applied cognitive professionals work closely with engineers and computer scientists. It is therefore not surprising that many people with bachelor-level training as engineers and computer scientists express interest in HFAC as a profession. Obstacles to such career paths have included the apathy of traditional engineering and computer science schools toward such training, as well as entrance barriers erected by psychology departments against those without substantial undergraduate course work in psychology. The Psychology Department at George Mason University seeks to overcome such traditional barriers and facilitate the graduate training of engineers and computer scientists in our HFAC master's program. PhD: GMU's Applied Cognitive Program emphasizes research that applies cognitive science theory to human factors concerns. Our emphasis is twofold: (1) research that extends cognitive theory in areas where practice has found it deficient; and (2) research that applies cognitive theories to build tools that can be used by practitioners to design human-machine systems. Students gain expertise in such areas as human-computer interaction, transportation, cognitive system engineering, cognitive ergonomics, telecommunications, process control, and computational cognitive modeling. Faculty help place students who do not have real-world experience in a part- or full-time practicum before completing their degree. The Washington, D.C., area boasts one of the largest concentrations of HFAC professionals in the nation. The historically strong concentration of government labs (such as Naval Research Laboratories, Army Research Institute, the Federal Highway Administration, the Federal Aviation Agency, and NASA) has been recently augmented by a growth in the software industries. This concentration benefits GMU's HFAC program in many ways. We draw upon these professionals as a source of adjunct faculty to supplement the expertise of the full-time faculty. Furthermore, the various laboratories, agencies, and industries provide numerous opportunities for practicum placements as well as job possibilities after the PhD. HFES student chapter: yes. Catalog: ($5, $7 overseas; send check or money order payable to the GMU Bookstore) George Mason University Bookstore, M/S 3a6, Fairfax, VA 22030.

APPLICATION:
Deadline: Applications will be reviewed and admissions decisions made (beginning 1/1 for PhD, 2/1 for MA). Review and admissions will continue until the class is full. Fees: $30. Separate applications required for university and department.

ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
PhD: GPA: 3.0. GRE: 1100 v + q. MA: GPA: 3.0. GRE: 1000 v + q. Other: In keeping with the eclectic nature of the field, candidates with eclectic backgrounds are preferred. We try to evaluate the candidate as a whole to find trade-offs among undergraduate degree, work experience, research experience, and other factors. Some of the skills we value in a candidate include knowledge of human information processing (recommended); experimental design (rec.); statistics (rec.); computer programming (rec.); and/or evidence of an interest in applying cognitive theory to real-world problems (rec.). Special consideration is given to those with engineering or computer science bachelor’s degrees. Research: PhD high, MA low. Work experience: medium. Letters: PhD high, MA medium. Interview: PhD medium, MA low.

ADMISSIONS:
Students applying last year: PhD 10, MA 24. Accepted: PhD 2, MA 12. Entered program: PhD 2, MA 10. Openings/year: PhD 2-4, MA 10-15.

TUITION AND FEES:
Residents: $195/credit (about 9 credits/semester for full-time students). Nonresidents: $500/credit.

FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:% receiving: PhD 100, MA 50. Doctoral students: 100% who wish support are receiving support. Master's students: For those who wish support, approx. 50% receive support after acceptance into the program but before beginning the program. The remaining master's students are placed with local agencies and companies after they begin the program. In the last five years, all master's students have had some support before completing their first semester. Amount: PhD $14400/year + tuition. MA $8000-$12000/year with partial support for tuition. Available: fellowships, TA, RA, scholarships, all tuition exempt. Apply: with application.

DEGREE REQUIREMENTS:
MA: 32 units, no exams or languages required, research and practical experience encouraged but optional, 2 years. Nonthesis option: yes. PhD: 88 units, comprehensive exam to advance to candidacy and oral defense of dissertation required, no languages required, research required, practical experience required, 4-6 years.

CURRICULUM:
Required courses (units): Cognitive Engineering: Cognitive Science Applied to HF (3); Task Analysis, Cognitive Task Analysis, and Protocol Analysis (3); Advanced Statistics and Research Methods Psych (8). Required or elective courses: Seminar in Human Factors & Applied Cognition (3); Seminar in Human-Technology Interactions (3); Advanced Topics in Sensation and Perception (3); Advanced Topics in Cognitive Science (3). (With permission of adviser, the above 4 courses may be repeated for credit; most are run as special topics. MA students must take 2 of the above 4 courses.) Required courses outside department: 0. Recommended courses outside department: Students may choose up to 6 hours of practica (contingent on availability) and/or up to 6 hours of thesis research. In addition, up to 9 hours of elective courses, from within or outside the department, may be taken with adviser's approval. Offered: night. Class size: 8-15.

RESEARCH/TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES:
Research facilities: The Human Factors and Applied Cognition program is housed in the ARCH Lab. Facilities include nine data collection rooms, five data analysis rooms, and space for five tenure-line faculty, two research faculty, and 15 graduate students. Each research room is equipped with 10BaseT Ethernet and a G4 or Pentium computer. Equipment includes an ASL 5000 eye tracker, several scan converters and video cameras, video editing facilities, many laser printers, scanners, an aircraft simulator, and so on. Extensive contacts among the aviation and military research communities facilitate the collection of off-site data in these domains, when needed. Teaching: All doctoral students are encouraged to work one or two semesters as a teaching assistant. Courses typically available to HFAC students include undergraduate statistics, memory and cognition (lab course), and perception and sensation (lab course). In addition, advanced doctoral students may teach one of these courses as the instructor. Current research: HFAC faculty and students are engaged in research and consulting for government and industry. Domain and industry examples include aviation (FAA, commercial aviation, and Air Force), ground transportation, education/training, Navy (submarines), human-computer interaction, telecommunications, distance education, and intelligent vehicle-highway systems. By research topic, examples include cognitive workload, human error, computational models of situation assessment, display-based problem solving, scientific reasoning, strategic control of attention, expertise in programming, spatial vs. verbal displays as navigation aids, role of trust in using automated devices.

STUDENT STATISTICS.Active: 11 men, 5 women. First-year students: 1 PhD, 10 MA. Mean scores: PhD: GRE 620 v, 640 q, 620 a, GPA: 3.44. MA: GRE 560 v, 620 q, 610 a. GPA: 3.10.

FACULTY. John Allen, PhD 1971, North Carolina State U; simulation, training, human performance. Deborah Boehm-Davis, PhD 1980, U California, Berkeley; human-computer interaction, transportation (aviation, highway), psychology of programming. Wayne D. Gray, PhD 1979, U California, Berkeley; human-computer interaction, computational cognitive modeling, cognitive task analysis. Robert Holt, PhD 1978, U Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; aviation, group decision-making. Chris Kello, PhD 1995, U California, Santa Cruz; connectionist modeling, cognitive control, spoken and written language processing.