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The opening of the former Soviet Union to the West has provided an
opportunity to describe Russian human factors/ergonomics and to
compare American theories and methods with it. Although this book
is principally dedicated to describing the theory of activity as it
applies to issues of design and training, it is also offered to a
general audience of psychologists and interested lay readers. This
theory studies the goal-directed behavior of man and attempts to
integrate the cognitive, motivational, and behavioral aspects of
activity into a holistic system. Such fundamental notions as goal,
action, and self-regulation are described and analyzed from totally
different theoretical points of view. This is the first
comprehensive, systematic description of the theory of activity in
the English language. Existing attempts to translate the theory of
activity into English suffer from certain limitations. Among them,
the theory of activity -- considered one of the more important
accomplishments of Soviet psychological science -- has an extensive
history dating back to the work of Vygotsky and his students.
Subsequent development of the theory by other well-known Soviet
psychologists and psychophysiologists took place within different
schools with some significant differences. In the former Soviet
Union, psychological theory could not be advanced unconnected to
Marxist-Leninist ideology. Accordingly, theoretical formulations
were subject to their own version of "political correctness." Books
published in this field were addressed only to other scientists
with backgrounds in the field. Moreover, the translation of the
technical terms in Russian psychology frequently resist translation
in the absence of the context of the debates in which they were
being used. Thus, simple translation of books in this field as they
were written in a specialized and politicized environment for
Russian audiences is really not a particularly sensible or
worthwhile undertaking. This book is addressed in the first
instance to Western psychologists. It compares, among other things,
analyses of work from the former Soviet Union with the work from
the West. Applications of activity theory to design and learning
were paramount in the Soviet Union. Using their own theoretical
perspective, the authors provide a comparative analysis of the
various schools working in activity theory. They hope that this
book may facilitate the exchange of ideas between Russian
psychological scientists and Western psychologists working in
ergonomics, human factors, industrial/organizational psychology,
education, learning, and related areas where the theory of activity
may find general application. This book's authors attempt to
provide a contribution not only to science but also to history.
Western researchers have strongly influenced Russian work, but
because of negative political pressure in the former USSR, the flow
of concepts was one-sided. Russian ergonomists received so much
from American and Western sources that it is now important to give
something back. Despite the considerable similarity between Russian
and American theories and methods, the special "spin" the former
put on their work may stimulate new thinking on the part of their
American colleagues.
The opening of the former Soviet Union to the West has provided an
opportunity to describe Russian human factors/ergonomics and to
compare American theories and methods with it. Although this book
is principally dedicated to describing the theory of activity as it
applies to issues of design and training, it is also offered to a
general audience of psychologists and interested lay readers. This
theory studies the goal-directed behavior of man and attempts to
integrate the cognitive, motivational, and behavioral aspects of
activity into a holistic system. Such fundamental notions as goal,
action, and self-regulation are described and analyzed from totally
different theoretical points of view.
This is the first comprehensive, systematic description of the
theory of activity in the English language. Existing attempts to
translate the theory of activity into English suffer from certain
limitations. Among them, the theory of activity -- considered one
of the more important accomplishments of Soviet psychological
science -- has an extensive history dating back to the work of
Vygotsky and his students. Subsequent development of the theory by
other well-known Soviet psychologists and psychophysiologists took
place within different schools with some significant differences.
In the former Soviet Union, psychological theory could not be
advanced unconnected to Marxist-Leninist ideology. Accordingly,
theoretical formulations were subject to their own version of
"political correctness." Books published in this field were
addressed only to other scientists with backgrounds in the field.
Moreover, the translation of the technical terms in Russian
psychology frequently resist translation in the absence of the
context of the debates in which they were being used. Thus, simple
translation of books in this field as they were written in a
specialized and politicized environment for Russian audiences is
really not a particularly sensible or worthwhile undertaking.
This book is addressed in the first instance to Western
psychologists. It compares, among other things, analyses of work
from the former Soviet Union with the work from the West.
Applications of activity theory to design and learning were
paramount in the Soviet Union. Using their own theoretical
perspective, the authors provide a comparative analysis of the
various schools working in activity theory. They hope that this
book may facilitate the exchange of ideas between Russian
psychological scientists and Western psychologists working in
ergonomics, human factors, industrial/organizational psychology,
education, learning, and related areas where the theory of activity
may find general application.
This book's authors attempt to provide a contribution not only to
science but also to history. Western researchers have strongly
influenced Russian work, but because of negative political pressure
in the former USSR, the flow of concepts was one-sided. Russian
ergonomists received so much from American and Western sources that
it is now important to give something back. Despite the
considerable similarity between Russian and American theories and
methods, the special "spin" the former put on their work may
stimulate new thinking on the part of their American
colleagues.
Human factors/ergonomics (HFE) as a discipline has grown by
accretions rather than having been developed systematically and
deliberately. Therefore, this book's goal creates a formal
conceptual structure for HFE. It is intended as a contribution to
cultural history because (a) ours is a technological civilization,
and (b) one cannot understand technology outside of the various
disciplines that make up that technology. A disciplinary history is
highly specialized, but the author maintains that HFE is
distinctive in being the only discipline that relates humans to
technology. Other behavioral disciplines like anthropology have
little connection with technology, and this is what makes HFE
important in the present historical era.
"Human Factors in System Design, Development, and Testing"
describes engineering system design as a behavioral process, a
process which raises questions the designer must answer. It focuses
on the concepts underlying the design process, culminating in a
behavioral theory of the design process. Special effort has been
made to depict human factors design as it actually occurs.
Particular attention is paid to users of the design products, with
special emphasis on design for the elderly and handicapped.
Written by one of the first leaders in human factors, this book
features:
*the use of a large scale survey of design specialists to
determine how design issues and problems are dealt with in real
life;
*an analysis of the engineering design process as actually being
based on cognitive behaviors; and
*the development of a behavioral theory of design.
Human factors/ergonomics (HFE) as a discipline has grown by
accretions rather than having been developed systematically and
deliberately. Therefore, this book's goal creates a formal
conceptual structure for HFE. It is intended as a contribution to
cultural history because (a) ours is a technological civilization,
and (b) one cannot understand technology outside of the various
disciplines that make up that technology. A disciplinary history is
highly specialized, but the author maintains that HFE is
distinctive in being the only discipline that relates humans to
technology. Other behavioral disciplines like anthropology have
little connection with technology, and this is what makes HFE
important in the present historical era.
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