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BACKGROUND:
Title: Human Factors Psychology (MA, PhD).
Contact: Charles G. Halcomb or Gary Greenberg, Wichita State Univ.,
Psychology Dept., 1845 N. Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0034; 316/978-3170; http://psychology.wichita.edu/hf/.
Est: 1990. Semester. Granted last 3 years: MA 7, PhD 7.
Part-time: no. Program: The PhD program, the only PhD program in
human factors psychology approved by the Kansas Board of Regents is also
certified by HFES. The human factors psychology is designed to provide strong
academic training in the tradition of experimental psychology in the context of
an applied specialization. Training is rooted in the behavioral sciences, with
an emphasis on research methods. Training occurs in the context of applying this
knowledge and these skills to the world of the professional human factors
psychologist. The university provides a unique environment for students to gain
practical experience while receiving fundamental academic training. All students
are required to complete an approved internship, and each student's program is
balanced between the academic and applied aspects of our profession. HFES
student chapter: yes. Catalog: ($3.25) Graduate School, Wichita State
University, 1845 N. Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0004.
APPLICATION:
Deadline: 3/15. Fee: U.S. $35, international
$50. Separate applications required for university and department. On-line
application available.
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
GPA: no specific GPA required. GRE: v + q
required. Other: Psychology. Undergraduate degrees, background, or
coursework required or recommended for admission: psychology background with
emphasis on learning, physiological psychology, and perception is recommended;
strong background in math and/or science/engineering is desirable.
Research: medium. Work experience: medium. Letters: medium.
Interview: low.
ADMISSIONS:
Students applying last year: 20. Accepted: 6.
Entered program: 6. Openings/year: 6-12.
TUITION AND FEES:
Resident: $138.05/credit hour. Nonresident:
$378.05/credit hour.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:
% receiving: 100. Amount: $6000-7000.
Available: TA (nonresident reduced to resident tuition, varying amounts
of resident tuition waived), RA, scholarship (nonresident tuition reduced to
resident tuition). Apply: with application.
DEGREE REQUIREMENTS:
PhD: 90 units, qualifying exam, no languages,
demonstrated math competency, second-year project research required, six month
internship required. 5 years. MA: (must be currently enrolled in PhD
program) 36 hours, second-year project research required, no exams, languages,
or practical experience required, 2 1/2 years. Nonthesis option:
yes.
CURRICULUM:
Required courses (units): Biological and
Philosophical Foundations of Psychology (3), Social and Developmental
Foundations of Behavior (3), Personality and Individual Differences (3),
Cognitive Foundations (3), Research Methods (8), Ethics (3), Seminar in
Perception (3), Seminar in Motor Behavior (3) Psychological Principles of Human
Factors (3), Seminar in Human Factors (3), Seminar in Software Psychology (3),
Graduate Research (10), Predoctoral research project (16-18), doctoral
dissertation (12), Internship (6). Required courses outside program: 12
units. Class size: 8-10.
RESEARCH/TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES:
Research facilities: The department,
housed in the four-story science building, maintains fully equipped labs and a
carpentry and electrical shop for use in human factors research. These
facilities include the Vision and Psychophysics Lab, Microcomputer Lab,
Cognitive Research Lab, and Human-Computer Interaction Lab (including software
usability labs and an instructional technology lab). The computer facilities are
state of the art and available to students for coursework and research.
Facilities include student/faculty access to Internet. The department local area
network provides students access to major software packages and ample secure
disk space for all their storage needs. The LAN also provides students with
opportunities to experience first hand human factors applications associated
with network management. Students also have access to the National Institute for
Aviation Research. The empirical focus of the program seeks to provide to
students wide exposure to research training, practice, and literature, as well
as theory. Teaching: Most, if not all, students will receive teaching
assistantships and will have the opportunity to obtain teaching experience.
Current research: Current human factors research involves cognitive
function, aging, development, human-computer interactions, aerospace issues,
perception and motor behavior, software usability, application of technology to
instruction, distance education. (All students are required to be actively
engaged and enrolled in research throughout their tenure as a graduated
student.)
STUDENT STATISTICS:
Active: 8 men, 13 women. First-year students:
6. Mean scores: PhD: GRE 500 v, 518 q, 578 a, GPA 3.78.
FACULTY:
Paul D. Ackerman, PhD 1968, U Kansas; social
processes, application of computer to lab. Randy Chambers, (adjucnt);
aviation psychology, cognition. Alex Chaparro, PhD 1990, Texas Tech U;
vision perception, color and night vision. Barbara Chaparro, PhD 1990,
Texas Tech U; human-computer interaction and usability. Darcee Datteri,
PhD 2000, Texas Christian U. Gary Greenberg, PhD 1970, Kansas State U;
human-animal interaction, circadian rhythms. Charles G. Halcomb, PhD
1964, Baylor U; human-computer interaction, experimental design, computer-based
testing, attention/vigilance, and computer-managed instruction. Daniel
McConnell, PhD 1999, Indian U.; perceptual and motor behavior. Marilyn
Turner, PhD 1999, Indiana U.; memory and cognition.