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Stress, Workload, and Fatigue
Contributor(s): Hancock, Peter A. (Editor), Desmond, Paula A. (Editor)
ISBN: 0805831789     ISBN-13: 9780805831788
Publisher: CRC Press
OUR PRICE:   $237.50  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2000
Qty:
Annotation: The purpose of this volume is to seek out, describe, and explain the shared commonalities of stress, fatigue, and workload. To understand and predict human performance response, we have to reach beyond the sterile, information-processing models to incorporate the emotive, affective, or more generally, energetic aspects of cognition. These facets of behavior surface most readily when the individual acts under stress, is faced by significant cognitive workload, or is in the grip of fatigue. However, energetic characteristics are pervasive and exert a vital and ubiquitous influence, even when they are not obviously in play as in extreme circumstances. Indeed, one cannot hope to understand behavior without their inclusion and integration into models and theories. This text addresses such theoretical questions as one of its main thrusts. However, in addition to the drive for scientific understanding, there are requirements in our progressively more utilitarian society which generate the need for a more fundamentalunderstanding of this particular topic. br
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Industrial & Organizational Psychology
Dewey: 158.7
LCCN: 99038851
Series: Human Factors in Transportation (Hardcover)
Physical Information: 0.87" H x 5.6" W x 8.55" (2.29 lbs) 700 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The purpose of this volume is to seek out, describe, and explain the shared commonalities of stress, fatigue, and workload. To understand and predict human performance response, we have to reach beyond the sterile, information-processing models to incorporate the emotive, affective, or more generally, energetic aspects of cognition. These facets of behavior surface most readily when the individual acts under stress, is faced by significant cognitive workload, or is in the grip of fatigue. However, energetic characteristics are pervasive and exert a vital and ubiquitous influence, even when they are not obviously in play as in extreme circumstances. Indeed, one cannot hope to understand behavior without their inclusion and integration into models and theories. This text addresses such theoretical questions as one of its main thrusts. However, in addition to the drive for scientific understanding, there are requirements in our progressively more utilitarian society which generate the need for a more fundamental understanding of this particular topic.