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NASA NTRS · Conference Proceedings

Human factors in equipment development for the Space Shuttle - A study of the general purpose work station

Published 2019-07-12 From Legacy CDMS 2 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Legacy CDMS.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

The results of a human factors test to assay the suitability of a prototype general purpose work station (GPWS) for biosciences experiments on the fourth Spacelab mission are reported. The evaluation was performed to verify that users of the GPWS would optimally interact with the GPWS configuration and instrumentation. Six male subjects sat on stools positioned to allow assimilation of the zero-g body posture. Trials were run concerning the operator viewing angles facing the console, the console color, procedures for injecting rates with dye, a rat blood cell count, mouse dissection, squirrel monkey transfer, and plant fixation. The trials were run for several days in order to gage improvement or poor performance conditions. Better access to the work surface was found necessary, together with more distinct and better located LEDs, better access window latches, clearer sequences on control buttons, color-coded sequential buttons, and provisions made for an intercom system when operators of the GPWS work in tandem.

Authors

  • Junge, M. K. NASA Ames Research Center
  • Giacomi, M. J. California State University

Citation: Junge, M. K., Giacomi, M. J. (2019). Human factors in equipment development for the Space Shuttle - A study of the general purpose work station. Legacy CDMS. NASA NTRS ID 19830045092. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19830045092 ↗