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History
The history of human factors at the University of Illinois parallels that
of the engineering psychology—the science of human behavior in the
operation of systems—as a distinct discipline, starting soon after
World War II. On January 1, 1946, Alexander Williams, who had served both
as a selection and training psychologist and as a naval aviator, opened
his Aviation Psychology Laboratory at the University of Illinois. The
laboratory’s initial focus on mission analysis and the experimental
study of flight display and control design principles soon expanded to
pioneering measurement of transfer of pilot training from simulators to
airplanes. The laboratory employed the first closed-loop visual system
for contact landing simulators and by 1951 world's first air traffic control
simulator was used in experimental work. Engineering psychology as a discipline
and aviation as its primary field of application were established by publication
of the first textbook in the field in 1949, “Applied Experimental
Psychology” by Chapanis, Garner, and Morgan.
Williams stayed at Illinois until 1955 and was succeeded by Robert C.
Houston for two years and then by Jack A. Adams until 1965. The laboratories
of Williams at Illinois, Chapanis at Johns Hopkins, and Fitts at Ohio
State were by no means the only ones involved in the engineering psychology
field in the 1940s and early '50s, but they were the ones that produced
the lion's share of the engineering psychologists during that period.
The students of Williams and Fitts invaded the aviation industry in the
early 1950s, the golden era of new aircraft development. In 1953, few
psychologists hired by airplane and aviation electronics companies had
training in engineering psychology and fewer yet had specialized in aviation.
The demand for graduates of the universities with aviation programs in
industry and military laboratories was therefore high.
During the 1950s, a number of key reports and articles emanating from
research done at Illinois addressed not only pilot selection and training
deficiencies and perceptual-motor problems encountered by aviators with
poorly designed aircraft instrumentation but also flight operations, aircraft
maintenance, and air traffic control. These reports helped solidify the
crucial role of engineering psychology in aviation systems development
and establish the reputation of the University of Illinois as the preeminent
research institution in the field. All of the above problem areas have
subsequently received serious experimental attention by engineering psychologists
both in the United States and abroad. There are now some established principles
for the design, maintenance, and operation of complex systems that have
application beyond the immediate settings of the individual experiments
on which they are based.
- The
Adolescence of Engineering Psychology by Stanley N. Roscoe.
Contact Info
About Human Factors at UIUC
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