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BACKGROUND:
Title: Industrial Engineering with a Concentration
Option in Ergonomics and Human Factors Engineering (MS, PhD). Contact: Vincent
G. Duffy or Larry G. Brown, Department of Industrial Engineering, Mississippi
State University, 125 McCain Engineering Building, Mississippi State, MS
39762-9542; 662/325-3865; http://www.ie.msstate.edu/. Est.:
1962. Semester. Degrees granted last 3 years: MS 4, PhD 2.
Part-time: Yes. Program: The Ergonomics and Human Factors
Engineering Concentration Option in Industrial Engineering is designed for
students who desire comprehensive education in industrial and cognitive
ergonomics. The option provides students with knowledge of ergonomics and human
factors design principles for systems engineering. Students electing this
concentration are prepared for employment in industry or consulting as a human
factors engineer at an intermediate or senior level depending upon prior work
experience. HFES Student Chapter: No. Catalog: (free; published
four times per year: February, July; semi-monthly in April) Mississippi State
University Registrar’s Office, P.O. Box 5268, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5268
or Office of Graduate Studies, P.O. Box G, 116 Allen Hall, Mississippi State
University, Mississippi State, MS 39762; grad@grad.msstate.edu.
APPLICATION:
Deadlines: 6/1 (fall), 11/1 (spring), 4/1 (summer).
Fee: $25 out of state or international.
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
MS: QPA.: 3.0/4.0 (junior and senior years).
GRE: students entering with BS from program not accredited by EAC/ABET
must submit composite v, q and a. Other: TOEFL 550 (international) and BS from
an EAC/ABET accredited program is recommended. PhD: MS from an EAC/ABET
accredited program is recommended. Research: medium. Work experience:
medium. Extracurricular activities: low. Letters: high.
Interview: medium.
ADMISSIONS:
Student acceptance rate in IE in 2001: 46%.
Entered program in IE in 2001: 18. Openings/year in E/HFE option:
3-5.
TUITION AND FEES:
Resident: $1793/semester. Nonresident:
$4064/semester. Part-time: $199.25/hour for residents, $451.75/hour
for nonresidents.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:
% receiving: 75. Amount:
$10800/$14400/$18888. Available: Assistantship (tuition exempt); GTA,
and GRA (tuition exempt). Apply: with application.
DEGREE REQUIREMENTS:
MS: 30 hours including thesis research, thesis
defense, no languages or practical experience required, 9-hour minimum
enrollment (fall, spring), 6-hour minimum enrollment (summer), no internship,
1.75 years. MS nonthesis option: available. PhD: includes
preliminary exam (written and oral), dissertation research, dissertation
defense, no languages or practical experience required, no internship, 3
years.
CURRICULUM:
MS: Current courses include: Human Factors
Engineering (3), Ergonomics (3), Occupational Safety Engineering (3), Cognitive
Engineering (3), Engineering Statistics II (4), Transportation Human Factors
(3), Cognitive Science (3), Human-Computer Interaction (3), Special Topics in
Industrial Engineering (3). Required courses outside department: 0.
Recommended courses outside department: 2. Offered: night (occasionally),
no weekends, summer (frequently). Class size: 5-20.
RESEARCH/TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES:
Research facilities: The Department of
Industrial Engineering has well-developed laboratories that support research and
teaching in industrial and cognitive ergonomics. The labs have a combined size
of approximately 1500 square feet. A new laboratory for Cognitive Systems
Engineering will be opened in McCain Engineering Hall in fall 2002. The new
state –of-the-art laboratory will be about 5000 square feet and will house
sponsored projects related to the human aspects of advanced technologies,
human-computer interaction, virtual industrial safety training systems, design
for an aging population, and efforts to improve human reliability and
performance in health care and transportation systems. Additional university
facilities supporting cognitive ergonomics research include the Mississippi
State University/National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center (ERC).
The ERC has a Computer Automatic Virtual Environment (CAVE), which is supported
by a multiprocessor and multipipe Silicon Graphics (SGI) Onyx RealityEngine2 and
integrated with motion trackers and a wand hand control. Those facilities
support research in human-computer interaction, distance learning, user
cognition, scientific visualization and virtual reality. Teaching: GTAs
primarily assist faculty with laboratory teaching (Work Analysis & Design
(3), Human Factors Engineering (3), Ergonomics (3)). Occasional opportunities to
assume classroom teaching responsibilities or to serve as instructor of record
are available to advanced PhD students. Current research: Human aspects
of advanced technologies, human-computer interaction, virtual reality
applications in industrial safety training, transportation human factors, human
factors testing and evaluation, computer system design for effective health
system access, human reliability, cognitive engineering and human performance,
human interface and the management of information.
STUDENT STATISTICS:
Active in IE: 40. Entered program in 2001:
18. Mean scores: GRE 1767 v+q+a, Q.P.A. 3.2/4.0.
FACULTY AFFILIATED WITH THE E/HFE
OPTION:
Royce O. Bowden, PhD
1992, Mississippi State U; intermodal transportation systems and simulation.
Gary L. Bradshaw, PhD 1984, Carnegie-Mellon U; scientific discovery,
technology-mediated education, learning and transfer, cognitive models.
Stanley F. Bullington, PhD 1990, Auburn U; quality management and
engineering management. Stephanie M. Doane, PhD, 1986, U of California,
Santa Barbara; skill acquisition, computational models of cognition, expertise.
Vincent G. Duffy, PhD 1996, Purdue U; virtual environments, industrial
ergonomics and transportation human factors. William N. Smyer, PhD 1981,
Auburn U; engineering design and production. John M. Usher, PhD 1989,
Louisiana State U; applications of AI to manufacturing, intelligent robotics,
manufacturing and automation.