Designer Magazine (http://www.thedesignermagazine.com) has just published an extensive feature on the Ergonomics – Real Design Exhibition featuring an interview with the project lead Dr Mark Young.
Posts Tagged ‘The Design Museum’
Article on Ergonomics Real Design Exhibition in Designer Magazine
Thursday, December 17th, 2009Ergonomics Society Annual Lecture
Friday, May 22nd, 2009Craik was a psychologist who did his most profound work during the Second World War, and as Rob explained, was really ahead of his time in coming up with ergonomics issues and theories that we’re still working with today. And remember that this is a good 5-10 years before the formation of the Ergonomics Research Society (now The Ergonomics Society) in 1949.
There were many gems in Craik’s work that stood out for me, not least of all his exposition of the systems approach as necessary to understand the interplay between human and machine. For me, as someone still (relatively!) early in his career, this was a bit of a revelation as I always thought that systems thinking was a relatively recent approach – it’s certainly only just getting into the minds of road safety experts (see the Department for Transport’s recent consultation - I’ll come back to this another time).
The other one that really hit me was how – as Rob explained it – Craik saw ergonomics as a means of genetic modification in design evolution. In other words, we can’t wait for design to evolve out the bad genes, as there’s too much at stake – we have to accelerate the process. This is a lovely turnaround from what I often teach my students, in that technology and design are nowadays evolving so quickly that they’re outpacing the human ability to keep up.
Errornomics?!
Friday, March 20th, 2009I was intrigued and amused this week to see a book review in The Independent newspaper for “Why We Make Mistakes” by Joseph Hallinan, a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist, no less. Sounds great, I thought, and right up my street – a book on human error aimed at the pop science market.
At first glance it seems to tick all the boxes, too – talking about lapses of memory, optical illusions, and even medical errors that were down to equipment design. All very relevant to ergonomics. But hold on – did that word actually appear anywhere in the book?
It certainly didn’t appear in the review, and the more I read, the more it irked me. This really is a book about ergonomics, but there is no reference to the underlying scientific discipline anywhere. The book (or the review, at least) actually has it wrong in places too – referring to the phenomenon of ‘change blindness’ (not by name, of course) as an ophthalmological problem – but it’s actually about information processing and expectations, nothing to do with our visual acuity. And there are even some areas where it’s treading on thin ice – for instance, the author’s own claim that it’s a “field guide to human error” … well, I’m afraid Sidney Dekker wrote the Field Guide to Human Error, and he’s a proper ergonomist.
The icing on the cake was when I read the plans for the UK release (later this year) to be titled ‘Errornomics’ (cashing in on the success of ‘Freakonomics’). But for a consonant or two, he so nearly stumbled across the right word!
I’ll probably end up giving it a read when it comes out in the UK, though I’m quite prepared to get wound up reading it (not least for the fact it’ll be a case of “why didn’t I do that”). I’m all for bringing this subject into the public consciousness, but I’d rather the source material were acknowledged. Could’ve been a chance to make ‘ergonomics’ a household word – alas, I fear the chance has been missed.
Ergonomics is 60!
Friday, February 13th, 2009On BBC Radio 4’s ‘Today’ programme this morning, there was a piece on the 60th anniversary of Murphy’s law – the law of physics which states that “everything that can go wrong, will go wrong”. It was prefaced as one of the year’s anniversaries that will affect us more on a day-to-day basis than, say, Darwin or Galileo’s discoveries.
I’ve got another one. This year coincidentally marks the 60th anniversary of ergonomics in the UK – as it was in 1949 that the Ergonomics Research Society first formed. Now known as The Ergonomics Society (and changing its name this year to the Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors) the Society is the UK’s professional body for this field, with some 1500 members.
I’m involved with The Ergonomics Society as its Chair of External Relations, and we’re planning a host of events throughout the year to mark the anniversary. There is a series of breakfast meetings for industry practitioners, there’s an historical Society lecture at the Royal Society of Arts in May, a prestigious anniversary conference at the Royal College of Physicians in April, and we’re culminating with an ergonomics exhibition at the Design Museum opening in November.
The exhibition, which we’ve called Real World Design, is being run in partnership between Brunel University (myself and Fergus Bisset),Loughborough University (Prof Roger Haslam), the Design Museum and Laura Grant Associates, with support from The Ergonomics Society and the Office of the Rail Regulator. The project is funded by the EPSRC, and I dare say I’ll be keeping you updated on it here as it progresses.
I like the synergy with the Murphy’s law anniversary – ergonomics affects us all at an everyday level, and in many cases it is also about things going wrong. That is, a good application of ergonomics can stop (human-made) things going wrong in the first place. Maybe then, some years in the future, we could be celebrating another big milestone for ergonomics and everyone will have forgotten about Murphy’s law…


