Occupational Safety Engineering And Ergonomics

A worker stacks large boxes in a warehouse.

Learn how you can develop and manage safe and healthy environments for workers by engineering solutions to minimize injuries and hazards. There is high demand for skilled professionals and well trained researchers with experience in Occupational Safety Engineering and Ergonomics, and efforts to improve workplace well being have an impact. Improved working environments, safer machinery, better worker training, and dramatic changes in the nature of work itself, have resulted in the decline of both fatal and non-fatal workplace injuries. Yet occupational injury remains a major national concern and economic burden. Through the OSE program, you can contribute to the design, analysis, implementation, and improvement of facilities, equipment, tools, and processes to assure the safety and well-being of human resources in all work environments and the surrounding communities.

Key Topics:

  • Biomechanics
  • Cognitive Ergonomics
  • Human-Robot Interaction
  • Occupational Safety
  • Physical Ergonomics
  • Robotics

Foundation Courses

IOE 434 Human Error and Complex System Failures

Advisory prerequisites: IOE 333, IOE 536, or permission of instructor. (3 credits)

Introduction to a new systems-oriented approach to safety management and the analysis of complex system failures. The course covers a wide range of factors contributing to system failures: human perceptual and cognitive abilities and limitations, the design of modern technologies and interfaces, and biases in accident investigation and error analysis. Recent concepts in the area of high-reliability organizations and resilience engineering are reviewed. Students perform systems analysis of actual mishaps and disasters in various domains, including various modes of transportation, process control, and health care.  

IOE 533 (MFG 535) Human Motor Behavior and Engineering Systems

Advisory prerequisites: IOE 333 and IOE 366. (3 credits)

This course is designed to provide a basic perspective of the major processes of human motor behavior. Emphasis will be placed on understanding motor control and man-(machine)-environment interaction. Information processing will be presented and linked to motor behavior. Application of theories to the design of the workplace, controls, and tools will be underlined and illustrated by substantial examples. 

Suggested courses to learn more about the human systems integration program area

Physical ergonomics

IOE 438 Occupational Safety Management

IOE 463 (MFG 463). Measurement and Design of Work

IOE 491 Special Topics in Industrial and Operations Engineering: Quantifying Human Motion Through Wearable Sensors

IOE 534 (BIOMEDE 534) (MFG 534). Occupational Biomechanics

Cognitive ergonomics

IOE 430 Global Cultural Systems Engineering

IOE 436 Human Factors in Computer Systems

IOE 437 Automotive Human Factors

IOE 536 Cognitive Ergonomics and Human System Integration

Methods

IOE 465 Design of Experiments.

IOE 491 Special Topics in Industrial and Operations Engineering: Designing for User Experience

IOE 570 (Stats 570) Experimental Design