2017
DOI: 10.1177/1541931213601633
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The Use of Human Factors to Address Medical Research Replicability Through the Development of Software Based Solution

Abstract: The lack of research replicability is becoming more of a concern in many fields. The medical research community and specifically the National Institutes of Health are concerned about how this issue will affect the well-being of the field (Collins & Tabak, 2014). However, this situation represents an opportunity to showcase how human factors can act as a solution through a combination of usability and human systems integration. The current work details how the development of a software platform designed to … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…A human factors (HF) professional contributed to the initial development process as well as subsequent product evaluations. Concurrent with the development of XDA, a three‐tiered approach was implemented to search for flaws and assess the usability and increase its utility (Kelling, Ward, Malin, Buras, & Hetherington, ). The heuristic analyses utilized a sizeable number of graduate students specializing in Human Factors (HF) Psychology in collaboration with HF faculty to critically test the system repeatedly during its development, including probing potential system failure points, mapping system pathways, evaluating esthetics and overall use, and identifying potential user error points.…”
Section: Evaluation Of Xdamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A human factors (HF) professional contributed to the initial development process as well as subsequent product evaluations. Concurrent with the development of XDA, a three‐tiered approach was implemented to search for flaws and assess the usability and increase its utility (Kelling, Ward, Malin, Buras, & Hetherington, ). The heuristic analyses utilized a sizeable number of graduate students specializing in Human Factors (HF) Psychology in collaboration with HF faculty to critically test the system repeatedly during its development, including probing potential system failure points, mapping system pathways, evaluating esthetics and overall use, and identifying potential user error points.…”
Section: Evaluation Of Xdamentioning
confidence: 99%