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Hierarchical task analysis vs. cognitive work analysis: comparison of theory, methodology and contribution to system design

Hierarchical task analysis vs. cognitive work analysis: comparison of theory, methodology and contribution to system design
Hierarchical task analysis vs. cognitive work analysis: comparison of theory, methodology and contribution to system design
The cognitive work analysis framework continues to attract increasing attention from the human factors and ergonomics community. Conversely, hierarchical task analysis has been, and remains, the most popular of all human factors and ergonomics methods. This article compares the two approaches in terms of their theoretical underpinning, methodological approach and potential contributions to system design and evaluation. To do this, recent analyses, involving both approaches, of a military rotary wing mission planning software tool are compared and contrasted in terms of their methodological procedure and analysis outputs. The findings indicate that, despite the very different theoretical and methodological nature of the two approaches, and also the entirely different analyses derived, the two methods provide highly complementary outputs. In conclusion, it is argued that there is benefit in applying both approaches to inform the design and/or evaluation of the same product or system.
cognitive work analysis, hierarchical task analysis, mission planning, human factors methods
1464-536X
504-531
Salmon, Paul
5398e747-09a5-47c2-9982-2906880c64c6
Jenkins, Daniel
8af59ee3-299b-488a-96c7-49a7565dfcbb
Stanton, Neville
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Walker, Guy
4781aa69-b98d-4f07-80f8-76e315d54bfd
Salmon, Paul
5398e747-09a5-47c2-9982-2906880c64c6
Jenkins, Daniel
8af59ee3-299b-488a-96c7-49a7565dfcbb
Stanton, Neville
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Walker, Guy
4781aa69-b98d-4f07-80f8-76e315d54bfd

Salmon, Paul, Jenkins, Daniel, Stanton, Neville and Walker, Guy (2010) Hierarchical task analysis vs. cognitive work analysis: comparison of theory, methodology and contribution to system design. Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science, 11 (6), 504-531. (doi:10.1080/14639220903165169).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The cognitive work analysis framework continues to attract increasing attention from the human factors and ergonomics community. Conversely, hierarchical task analysis has been, and remains, the most popular of all human factors and ergonomics methods. This article compares the two approaches in terms of their theoretical underpinning, methodological approach and potential contributions to system design and evaluation. To do this, recent analyses, involving both approaches, of a military rotary wing mission planning software tool are compared and contrasted in terms of their methodological procedure and analysis outputs. The findings indicate that, despite the very different theoretical and methodological nature of the two approaches, and also the entirely different analyses derived, the two methods provide highly complementary outputs. In conclusion, it is argued that there is benefit in applying both approaches to inform the design and/or evaluation of the same product or system.

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More information

Published date: 8 February 2010
Keywords: cognitive work analysis, hierarchical task analysis, mission planning, human factors methods

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 186491
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/186491
ISSN: 1464-536X
PURE UUID: 2604c7f5-ae7e-4550-832c-8292383aab3e
ORCID for Neville Stanton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8562-3279

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Date deposited: 13 May 2011 10:40
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33

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Contributors

Author: Paul Salmon
Author: Daniel Jenkins
Author: Neville Stanton ORCID iD
Author: Guy Walker

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