How do they match: Human Factors Engineers and Ergonomists

  • Inspect work sites to identify physical hazards.
  • Analyze complex systems to determine potential for further development, production, interoperability, compatibility, or usefulness in a particular area, such as aviation.
  • Assess the user-interface or usability characteristics of products.
  • Design or evaluate human work systems, using human factors engineering and ergonomic principles to optimize usability, cost, quality, safety, or performance.
  • Develop or implement research methodologies or statistical analysis plans to test and evaluate developmental prototypes used in new products or processes, such as cockpit designs, user workstations, or computerized human models.

  • Inspect facilities or sites to determine if they meet specifications or standards.
  • Analyze operational data to evaluate operations, processes or products.
  • Assess product or process usefulness.
  • Estimate technical or resource requirements for development or production projects.
  • Estimate time requirements for development or production projects.
  • Recommend technical design or process changes to improve efficiency, quality, or performance.