Faculty
Name Jie Xu, Ph.D. Position Assistant Professor Contact E-mail: [email protected] Tel: 0571-88273239 Research Interest Augmented cognition, Teamwork, user-centered design, emotion in decision-making, trust in technology | |
Biography Dr. Jie (Jay) Xu is a human factors engineer who has studied the principles and methods of human factors and ergonomics, human-computer interaction, and systems engineering and their application in the design of sociotechnical systems in healthcare and nuclear power industries. He has conducted human factors research related to trust in technology, group affect, team physiological compliance, physician-patient communication, user-centered design, simulation traini-ng, and event reporting. These studies were conducted in various environments, such as the laboratory, primary care, emergency care, surgical room, intensive care, cancer care, and nuclear power main control room. He's current research interests include neuroergonomics, augmented cognition, teamwork, and user experience. His goal is to advance the theory and practice of human factors engineering and design effective, efficient, and safe work systems. His current research interest is the measurement and prediction of human stress responses and understanding how such responses influence human-human and human-computer system interactions and performance. He focused his research on understanding human performance under stress using neuroergonom-ics and augmented cognition methods. His goal is to advance the theory and practice of human factors engineering and design effective, efficient, and safe work systems.
Work Experience 2017 – present Assistant Professor Center for Psychological Sciences, Zhejiang University 2017 – present Adjunct Assistant Professor Center for Research and Innovation in Systems Safety, Vanderbilt University 2016 – 2017 Research Instructor Center for Research and Innovation in Systems Safety, Vanderbilt University 2013 – 2015 Research Project Coordinator Wellness and Health Enhancement Engineering Lab, Northwestern University 2010 – 2013 Research Assistant UW Human-Computer Interaction Lab, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Education and Training 2016 Postdoc Human Factors Vanderbilt University 2016 Ph.D. Industrial Engineering University of Wisconsin – Madison 2011 M.S. Industrial Engineering University of Wisconsin – Madison 2009 B.S. Applied Psychology East China Normal University 2009 B.E. Mechanical Engineering Donghua University
Selected Research Projects 2016 – 2017,“Monitoring, Extracting and Decoding Indicators of Cognitive Load” US Department of Defense, Co-Investigator 2015 – 2017,“Meta-Level Design Guidance and Operator Performance Measures for Hybrid Control Rooms” US Department of Energy, Co-Investigator 2013 – 2015,“National Infrastructure for Standardized and Portable EHR Phenotyping Algorithms” US National Institutes of Health, Usability Consultant &Project Coordinator 2012 – 2015,“Active and Passive User Trust in Sociotechnical Systems” US Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Project Manager
Selected Publications [1] Chrouser, K., Xu, J., Hallbeck, S., Weinger, M. B., & Partin, M. (In press). The influence of stress responses on surgical performance and outcomes: literature review and the development of the surgical stress effects (SSE) framework. American Journal of Surgery. [2] Xu, J.*, Reale, C., Slagle, J. M., Anders, S., Shotwell, M. S., Dresselhaus, T., and Weinger, M. B. (2017). Facilitated Medication- related Event Reporting to Improve Medication Management Quality and Safety in Intensive Care Units. Nursing Research,66(5), 337-349. [3] Xu, J., Anders, S., Pruttianan, A., France, D. J., Lau, N., Adam, J. A., & Weinger, M. B. (2017). Human Performance Measures for the Evaluation of Nuclear Power Plant Control Room Interfaces: A Systematic Review. Proceedings of the 10th International Topical Meeting on Nuclear Plant Instrumentation, Control and Human-Machine Interface Technology (NPIC & HMIT 2017). [4] Xu, J.*, Rasmussen, L. V., Shaw, P., Jiang, G., Kiefer, R., Mo, H., Pacheco, J. A., Speltz, P., Zhu, Q., Denny, J., Pathak, J., Thompson, W. K., & Montague, E. (2015). Review and evaluation of electronic health records-driven phenotype algorithm authoring tools for clinical and translational research. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 22(6), 1251-1260. [Editor’s Choice] [5] Xu, J., Montague, E., Gratch, J., Hancock, P., Jeon, M., & Pfaff, M. (2015). Advances of Research in Affective Processes in Communication and Collaboration. Proceedings of the 59th Annual Meeting of Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. [6] Xu, J., Le, K., Deitermann, A., & Montague, E. (2014). How different types of users develop trust in technology: A qualitative analysis of the antecedents of active and passive user trust in a shared technology. Applied Ergonomics, 45(6), 1495-1503. [7] Montague, E., Xu, J., & Chiou, E. (2014). Shared Experiences of Technology and Trust: An Experimental Study of Physiological Compliance between Active and Passive Users in Technology Mediated Collaborative Encounters. IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems, 44(5), 614-624. [8] Xu, J., Montague, E. (2013). Group polarization of trust in technology. Proceedings of the 57th Annual Meeting of Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 56(1), 344-348. [9] Xu, J., & Montague, E. (2012). Psychophysiology of the passive user: Exploring the effect of technological conditions and personality traits. International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics, 42(5), 505-512. [10] Montague, E., & Xu, J. (2012). Understanding active and passive users: The effects of an active user using normal, hard and unreliable technologies on user assessment of trust in technology and co-user. Applied Ergonomics, 43(4), 702-712.
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