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BACKGROUND:
Title: Experimental-Human Factors Psychology (MA).
Contact: William F. Moroney, Dept. of Psychology, University of Dayton,
Dayton, OH 45469-1430; 937/229-2767, fax 937/229-3900; moroney@udayton.edu. Est: 1981.
Semester. Granted last 3 years: MA: 7. Part-time: Yes. Program: Emphasis
is placed on the integration of theory, data, and methodology of experimental
psychology with that of human factors. The curriculum stresses integration of
knowledge in three major areas: (a) theoretical models and quantitative research
methodology associated with cognition, perception, and physiological processes;
(b) the application of knowledge about psychological processes to the
development of systems, interfaces, and work environments; and (c) the methods
and tools that the human factors specialist applies during system analysis,
design, and evaluation. Specializes in human-computer interaction, information
technology, aerospace, and ergonomics applications. Opportunities exist for
practicum and co-op experience with local human factors research an development
facilities in both government and industry. The program is structured to prepare
the student for a career in human factors applications and research, or
doctoral-level studies in human factors or experimental psychology. For
additional details see http://www.udayton.edu/~psych/humfac.html.
Accredited by: HFES. HFES student chapter: Yes, see http://www.udayton.edu/~udhfes/.
Catalog: (free): William F. Moroney, Dept. of Psychology, University of
Dayton, Dayton, OH 45469-1430.
APPLICATION:
Deadlines: 3/15 for financial assistance, otherwise
6/1. Fee: None, see http://www.udayton.edu/~gradsch/app.htm.
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
GPA: 3.0. GRE: 1000 v + q. Other: 15
semester hours of psychology including statistics, experimental psychology or
research design, and 6 semester hours in upper-level psychology courses. The
calculus and computer programming requirement may be dropped for 2004 applicants
and following applicants. Applicants without necessary preparation may be
admitted conditionally; regular standing contingent upon completion of
coursework specified by admissions committee. Research: medium. Work
experience: medium. Letters: high. Interview: medium.
ADMISSIONS:
Students applying last year: 15 Accepted: 9.
Entered program: 4. Openings/year: 3-6.
TUITION AND FEES:
Resident and nonresident: $505/credit hour.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:
% receiving: 100. Amount: for 9 months $8400/salary
from local organizations. Available: GA, RA both tuition exempt and
Julian M. Christensen Endowment Fund. There are also local positions with
industry/government. Apply: with application.
DEGREE REQUIREMENTS:
MA: 39 units, oral defense of proposal and thesis,
no languages, thesis, practicum, 2 years. Nonthesis option: No.
CURRICULUM:
Required courses: Engineering Psychology,
Ergonomics, Human Factors in System Development, Perception, Cognitive
Processes, Experimental Design and Statistics, History and Systems, Thesis,
Practicum. Popular electives: Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Aviation
Psychology, Visual Displays, Questionnaire Design. Required courses outside
department: 0. Recommended courses outside department: 1-2.
Offered: evening. Class size: 5-10.
RESEARCH/TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES:
Research facilities: Research and support
facilities include those of the university, the Psychology Department, the
University Research Institute, and the Southwest Ohio Human Factors/Ergonomics
Consortium (SOHFEC). Through SOHFEC, students can take courses and participate
in research at the University of Cincinnati and Miami University. The Psychology
Department maintains the Human Factors/Cognitive Psychology research lab, which
includes microcomputer-based facilities capable of supporting multiple
simultaneous experiments and studies of group processes. Approximately
2000 sqare feet of laboratory space is divided into observation rooms and
experimental areas. The Psychology Teaching Laboratory (an additional 1500 sqare
feet) has 23 LAN-connected Pentium III or higher workstations and several
experimental areas. The University Information Systems Lab, a state-of-the-art
video/behavioral observation facility, is utilized for studying human-computer
interaction. The Learning Teaching Center (http://ltc.udayton.edu/)
designed to encourage the use of technology in learning and teaching houses the
Collabatory. The mission of the Collaboratory (http://collaborate.udayton.edu/)
is to help teams apply groupware technology effectively. The Collaboratory
focuses on four major areas: team support, learning opportunities, research and
development, and consulting. Computing resources include microcomputers
and campus-wide networking. In addition to university facilities, opportunities
for access to human factors laboratory and flight simulation facilities at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base are open to students through cooperative
agreements between the university and Air Force Laboratory. Several coop
opportunities are available with local industries. The university and Research
Institute libraries contain more than a half million volumes as well as
extensive periodicals and technical report literature. Students can access and
obtain material from 43 university libraries throughout Ohio through OHIOLINK.
Teaching: Graduate assistants do not have teaching
responsibilities.
STUDENT STATISTICS:
Active: 6 men, 3 women. First-year
students: 4. Mean scores: MA: GRE 1152 (508 v, 645 q), GPA
3.3.
FACULTY:
David W. Biers, PhD 1970, Northwestern U;
quantitative methods, human-computer interaction, learning and information
technology. Samuel M. Bower, PhD 1963, Vanderbilt U; perception, product
design, accelerated training. Robert J. Crutcher, PhD 1992, U Colorado,
Boulder; memory, cognitive skill and learning, verbal report methodologies,
language acquisition, statistics and research design, computer applications.
Susan T. Davis, PhD 1991, Miami U; memory, especially context
effects and implicit memory; aesthetic preferences, including the effect of
illusions; creativity; problem-solving. Greg Elvers, PhD 1989, Purdue U;
human information processing, information integration, electronic classroom.
F. Thomas Eggemeier, PhD 1971, Ohio State U; workload assessment,
training, human performance. Donald J. Polzella, PhD 1974, U Michigan;
cognition and perception, performance measurement, environmental design.Sarah
J. Swierenga, PhD 1986, University of South Dakota; human-computer
interaction, usability testing, human factors. William F. Moroney, PhD
1968, St. Johns U; human factors in systems design, ergonomics, aviation,
questionnaire design.