What the Death Star can tell us about ergonomics methods
What the Death Star can tell us about ergonomics methods
Imagine having to identify a critical flaw in a highly complex planetoid-sized orbital battle station under extreme time pressure, and with no clear idea at the outset where the vulnerability will lie? This was the challenge faced by the Rebel Alliance in the film Star Wars. One of the belligerents, the Imperial Empire, considered it highly unlikely a weakness would be found even if the other combatant were in possession of a full technical readout of the station. How could it be done? The first option presented in this paper is to employ traditional error identification methods of the sort contemporaneous with the film's release in 1977 and still in widespread use today. The findings show the limitations of this deterministic world-view because the method selected did not predict the actual vulnerability exploited. The second option is to use a systems-based method to model the Death Star's functional constraints and affordances and use this to assess the system's resilience. This method did detect the film ending, and several others. What began as an amusing aside has turned into a highly effective means to communicate across disciplines and enhance ergonomic teaching and learning. It also provides a compelling narrative around the use of reductionist methods for systems problems, and some wider implications for ergonomic method selection in more earth-bound settings.
402-422
Walker, Guy
4781aa69-b98d-4f07-80f8-76e315d54bfd
Salmon, Paul
5398e747-09a5-47c2-9982-2906880c64c6
Bedinger, Melissa
462abf8f-32c1-4f6a-a6ac-b33f555854da
Stanton, Neville
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Walker, Guy
4781aa69-b98d-4f07-80f8-76e315d54bfd
Salmon, Paul
5398e747-09a5-47c2-9982-2906880c64c6
Bedinger, Melissa
462abf8f-32c1-4f6a-a6ac-b33f555854da
Stanton, Neville
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Walker, Guy, Salmon, Paul, Bedinger, Melissa and Stanton, Neville
(2016)
What the Death Star can tell us about ergonomics methods.
[in special issue: Methodological Issues in Ergonomics Science I]
Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science, 17 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/1463922X.2015.1130879).
Abstract
Imagine having to identify a critical flaw in a highly complex planetoid-sized orbital battle station under extreme time pressure, and with no clear idea at the outset where the vulnerability will lie? This was the challenge faced by the Rebel Alliance in the film Star Wars. One of the belligerents, the Imperial Empire, considered it highly unlikely a weakness would be found even if the other combatant were in possession of a full technical readout of the station. How could it be done? The first option presented in this paper is to employ traditional error identification methods of the sort contemporaneous with the film's release in 1977 and still in widespread use today. The findings show the limitations of this deterministic world-view because the method selected did not predict the actual vulnerability exploited. The second option is to use a systems-based method to model the Death Star's functional constraints and affordances and use this to assess the system's resilience. This method did detect the film ending, and several others. What began as an amusing aside has turned into a highly effective means to communicate across disciplines and enhance ergonomic teaching and learning. It also provides a compelling narrative around the use of reductionist methods for systems problems, and some wider implications for ergonomic method selection in more earth-bound settings.
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 December 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 March 2016
Organisations:
Transportation Group
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Local EPrints ID: 397811
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/397811
ISSN: 1464-536X
PURE UUID: c699e4a1-5add-457d-ab64-b16d8cef852b
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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2016 10:45
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33
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Author:
Guy Walker
Author:
Paul Salmon
Author:
Melissa Bedinger
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