The Adolescence of
Aviation Psychology
References
- Alluisi, E. A. (1994). Roots and rooters. In H. L. Taylor (Ed.), Division
21 members who made distinguished contributions to engineering psychology.
Washington, DC: Division 21 of the American Psychological Association.
- Bartlett, F. C. (1943). Instrument controls and displays-Efficient
human manipulation (Report No. 565). London: UK Medical Research Council,
Flying Personnel Research Committee.
- Birmingham, H. P., & Taylor, F. V. (1954). A human engineering
approach to the design of man-operated continuous control systems (Report
NRL 4333). Washington, DC: Naval Research Laboratory, Engineering Psychology
Branch.
- Bond, N. A., Jr. (1970). Some persistent myths about military electronics
maintenance. Human Factors, 12, 241-252.
- Bryan, G. L., Bond, N. A., Jr., LaPorte, H. R., Jr., & Hoffman,
L. S. (1956). Electronics troubleshooting: A behavioral analysis.
Los Angeles: University of Southern California, Electronics Personnel Research
Group.
- Bryan, G. L., Rigney, J. W., Bond, N. A., Jr., LaPorte, H. R., Jr.,
Hoffman, L. S., & Mc Allister, B. N. (1959). The role of humans
in complex computer maintenance. Los Angeles: University of Southern
California, Electronics Personnel Research Group.
- Carel, W. L. (1960). Human factors in ANIP [Contract Nonr 1076(00)]
Ithaca, NY: General Electric, Advanced Electronics Center.
- Carel, W. L. (1961). Visual factors in the contact analog [Report
R61ElC60, Contract Nonr 1076(00)]. Ithaca, NY: General Electric, Advanced
Electronics Center.
- Carhart, R. R. (1953). A survey of the current status of the electronic
reliability problem (RM-1131-PR). Santa Monica, CA: Rand Corporation.
- Chapanis, A., Garner, W. R., & Morgan, C. T. (1949). Applied
Experimental Psychology. New York: Wiley.
- Craik, K. J. W. (1940). The fatigue apparatus (Cambridge cockpit)
(Report 119). London: British Air Ministry, Flying Personnel Research Committee.
- Craik, K. J. W. (1944). The psychological and physiological aspects
of control mechanisms with special reference to tank gunnery (Unpublished
Report). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University, Applied Psychology Unit.
- Craik, K. J. W., & Vince, M. A. (1943). Psychological and physiological
aspects of control mechanisms with special reference to tank gunnery.
Part I. London: UK Medical Research Council, Military Personnel
Research Committee.
- Craik, K. J. W., & Vince, M. A. (1944). Psychological and physiological
aspects of control mechanisms. Part II. (Report BPC 44/322). London:
UK Medical Research Council, Military Personnel Research Committee.
- Fitts, P. M. (1947). Psychological research on equipment design
(Research Report 19). Washington, DC: US Army Air Forces Aviation Psychology
Program.
- Fitts, P. M. (Ed.). (1951a). Human engineering for an effective
air-navigation and traffic-control system. Washington, DC: National
Research Council Committee on Aviation Psychology.
- Fitts, P. M. (1951b). Engineering psychology and equipment design.
In S. S. Stevens (Ed.), Handbook of experimental psychology (pp.
1287-1340). New York: Wiley.
- Fitts, P. M., Flood, M. M., Garman, R. A., & Williams, A. C., Jr.
(1957). The USAF human factor engineering mission as related to the
qualitative superiority of future man-machine weapon systems. Washington,
DC: US Air Force Scientific Advisory Board, Working Group on Human Factor
Engineering Social Science Panel.
- Flanagan, J. C. (Ed.). (1947). The aviation psychology program in
the Army Air Force (Research Report 1). Washington, DC: US Army Air
Forces Aviation Psychology Program.
- Flexman, R. E., Roscoe, S. N., Williams, A. C., Jr., & Williges,
B. E. (1972). Studies in pilot training: The anatomy of transfer. Aviation
Research Monographs, 2(1), 1-87.
- Grings, W. W., Rigney, J. W., Bond, N. A., Jr., & Summers, S. A.
(1953). A methodological study of electronics troubleshooting skill: II.
Inter-comparisons of the MASTS test, a job sample test, and ten reference
tests administered to fleet electronics technicians. Los Angeles: University
of Southern California, Electronics Personnel Research Group.
- Helson, H., & Howe, W. H. (1943). Inertia, friction and diameter
in handwheel tracking (OSRD Report 3454). Foxboro, MA: The Foxboro
Company.
- Hick, W. E. (1945). Friction in manual controls (Report 18). Cambridge:
UK Medical Research Council, Applied Psychology Unit.
- Howell, W. C. (1994). George Edward Briggs, 1926-1974. In H. L. Taylor
(Ed.), Division 21 members who made distinguished contributions to
engineering psychology. Washington, DC: Division 21 of the American Psychological
Association.
- Johnson, B. E., Williams, A. C., Jr., & Roscoe, S. N. (1951). A
simulator for studying human factors in air traffic control systems
(Report 11). Washington, DC: National Research Council Committee on Aviation
Psychology.
- Koonce, J. M. (1984). A brief history of aviation psychology. Human
Factors, 26, 499-508.
- Kraft, C. L., & Fitts, P. M. (1954). A broad band blue lighting
system for radar air traffic control centers (Technical Report TR 53-416).
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH: Wright Air Development Center.
- Licklider, J. C. R., & Kryter, K. D. (1944). Articulation tests
of standard and modified interphones conducted during flight at 5000
and 35,000 feet (OSRD Report 1976). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University,
Psycho-Acoustic Laboratory.
- Licklider, J. C. R., & Miller, G. A. (1951). The perception of
speech. In S. S. Stevens (Ed.), Handbook of experimental psychology
(pp. 1040-1074). New York: Wiley.
- Licklider, J. C. R. (Chair), Clementson, G. C., Doughty, J. M., Huggins,
W. H., Seeger, C. M., Smith, C. C., Williams, A. C., Jr., & Wray, J.
(1953). Human factors in the operation and maintenance of all-weather
interceptor systems: Conclusions and recommendations of Project Jay
Ray, a study group on human factors in all-weather interception (HFORL
Memorandum 41). Bolling Air Force Base, DC: Human Factors Operations Research
Laboratories.
- Miller, G. A. (1956). The magical number seven, plus or minus two:
Some limits on our capacity for processing information. Psychological
Review, 63, 81-97.
- Orlansky, J. (1994). Jack W. Dunlap, 1902-1977. In H. L. Taylor (Ed.),
Division 21 members who made distinguished contributions to engineering
psychology. Washington, DC: Division 21 of the American Psychological Association.
- Parsons, H. M. (1972). Man-machine system experiments. Baltimore
& London, The Johns Hopkins Press.
- Pew, R. W. (1994). Paul Morris Fitts, 1912-1965. In H. L. Taylor (Ed.),
Division 21 members who made distinguished contributions to engineering
psychology. Washington, DC: Division 21 of the American Psychological Association.
- Poulton, E. C. (1974). Tracking skill and manual control. New
York & London: Academic Press.
- Roscoe, S. N. (1992). From the roots to the branches of cockpit design:
Problems, principles, products. Human Factors Society Bulletin, 35(12),
1-2.
- Roscoe, S. N. (1994). Alexander Coxe Williams, Jr., 1914-1962. In H.
L. Taylor (Ed.), Division 21 members who made distinguished contributions
to engineering psychology. Washington, DC: Division 21 of the American
Psychological Association.
- Roscoe, S. N., Hasler, S. G., & Dougherty, D. J. (1952). Flight
by periscope: II. Making takeoffs and landings; The influence of image
magnification, practice, and various conditions of flight (Human
Engineering Report SDC 71-16-9, Contract N6ori-71, Task Order XVI). Port
Washington, NY: Office of Naval Research, Special Devices Center. (Eventually
declassified and published in Human Factors, 8, 13-40.)
- Roscoe, S. N., Smith, J. F., Johnson, B. E., Dittman, P. E., &
Williams, A. C., Jr. (1950). Comparative evaluation of pictorial and
symbolic VOR navigation displays in a 1-CA-1 Link trainer (Report No.
92). Washington, DC: Civil Aeronautics Administration, Division of Research.
- Skinner, B. F. (1960). Pigeon in a pelican. American Psychologist,
15, 28-37.
- Stroud, J. M. (1955). The fine structure of psychological time.
In H. Quastler (Ed.), Information theory in psychology. Glencoe,
IL: Free Press.
- Tolcott, M. A. (1994). Jerome Hirsch Ely, 1924-1963. In H. L. Taylor
(Ed.), Division 21 members who made distinguished contributions to engineering
psychology. Washington, DC: Division 21 of the American Psychological Association.
- Tufts College & US Naval Training Devices Center. (1949). Handbook
of human engineering data. Medford, MA: Author.
- Vince, M. A. (1945). Direction of movement of machine controls
(Report 233). London: UK Medical Research Council, Royal Naval Personnel
Research Committee; (Report 637) Cambridge: UK Medical Research Council,
Flying Personnel Research Committee.
- White, C. T. (1956). Time compression of radar and sonar displays
(Report 671). San Diego: US Naval Electronics Laboratory.
- Williams, A. C., Jr. (1947). Preliminary analysis of information
required by pilots for instrument flight (Contract N6ori-71, Task Order
XVI, Interim Report 71-16-1). Port Washington, NY: Office of Naval Research,
Special Devices Center.
- Williams, A. C., Jr. (1980, posthumously). Discrimination and manipulation
in goal-directed instrument flight. In S. N. Roscoe (Ed.), Aviation
psychology (pp. 11-30). Ames: Iowa State University Press.
- Williams, A. C., Jr., & Adelson, M. (1954). Some considerations
in deciding about the complexity of flight simulators (Research Bulletin
AFPTRC-TR-54-106). Lackland Air Force Base: Air Force Personnel and Training
Research Center.
- Williams, A. C., Jr., Adelson, M., & Ritchie, M. L. (1956). A
program of human engineering research on the design of aircraft instrument
displays and controls (WADC Technical Report 56-526). Wright Patterson
Air Force Base: Wright Air Development Center.
- Williams, A. C., Jr., & Flexman, R. E. (1949). An evaluation
of the Link SNJ operational trainer as an aid in contact flight training
(Contract N6ori-71, Task Order XVI, Technical Report 71-16-5). Port Washington,
NY: Office of Naval Research, Special Devices Center.
- Williams, A. C., Jr., Macmillan, J. W., & Jenkins, J. G. (1946).
Preliminary experimental investigation of "tension" as a determinant
of performance in flight training (Report 54, Publication Bulletin
L 503 25). Washington, DC: Civil Aeronautics Administration, Division of
Research.
- Williams, A. C., Jr., & Roscoe, S. N. (1949). Evaluation of
aircraft instrument displays for use with the omni-directional radio
range (Report 84). Washington, DC: Civil Aeronautics Administration, Division
of Research.
- Woodson, W. (1954). Human engineering guide for equipment designers.
Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Wulfeck, J. W., Weisz, A., & Raben, M. (1958). Vision in military
aviation (TR-WADC 58-399). Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH: Wright
Air Development Center.
© Copyright 1995 (and we mean it!)