Enhancing the Human Factors Engineering Role in an Austere Fiscal Environment

2003-01-2538

07/07/2003

Event
International Conference On Environmental Systems
Authors Abstract
Content
An austere fiscal environment in the aerospace community creates pressure to reduce program costs, often minimizing or even deleting human interface requirements from the design process. With the assumption that the flight crew can recover, in real time, from a poorly human factored space vehicle design, the classical crew interface requirements have either been not included in the design or not properly funded, even though they are carried as requirements. Cost cuts have also affected the quality of retained human factors engineering personnel.
Planning is ongoing to correct these issues. Herein are techniques for ensuring that human interface requirements are integrated with flight design from proposal through verification and launch activation. The integration includes human factors requirements refinement and consolidation across flight programs, keyword phrases in the proposals, closer ties with systems engineering and other classical disciplines, early planning for crew-interface verification, and an Agency-integrated human factors verification program under the “One NASA” theme. Importance is given to communication within the aerospace human factors discipline and utilizing the strengths of all government, industry, and academic human factors organizations in a unified research and engineering approach.
A list of recommendations and concerns is provided in closing.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-2538
Pages
9
Citation
Stokes, J., "Enhancing the Human Factors Engineering Role in an Austere Fiscal Environment," SAE Technical Paper 2003-01-2538, 2003, https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-2538.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 7, 2003
Product Code
2003-01-2538
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English