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Joel S. Greenstein

Researcher at Clemson University

Publications -  78
Citations -  1724

Joel S. Greenstein is an academic researcher from Clemson University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Usability & Aircraft maintenance. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 78 publications receiving 1366 citations. Previous affiliations of Joel S. Greenstein include Virginia Tech.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Healthcare information on YouTube: A systematic review

TL;DR: The need to design interventions to enable consumers to critically assimilate the information posted on YouTube with more authoritative information sources to make effective healthcare decisions is recognized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Realizing improved patient care through human-centered operating room design: a human factors methodology for observing flow disruptions in the cardiothoracic operating room

TL;DR: By using the detailed architectural diagrams, the authors were able to clearly demonstrate for the first time the unique role that OR design and equipment layout has on the generation of physical layout flow disruptions.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Use of eye movements as feedforward training for a synthetic aircraft inspection task

TL;DR: This work shows how providing this type of scanpath-based feedforward training of novices leads to improved accuracy performance in the simulator coupled with an observed speed-accuracy tradeoff, suggesting trainedNovices learn a more deliberate target search/discrimination strategy that requires more time to execute.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of the effect of feedforward training displays of search strategy on visual search performance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the effects of three feedforward training displays on novice visual search performance and found that the performance of the hybrid display was significantly better than that of the control and static display groups, but was not significantly different from the dynamic display group.
Journal ArticleDOI

An investigation of the efficacy of electronic consenting interfaces of research permissions management system in a hospital setting

TL;DR: The findings suggest the viability of cautious adoption of electronic consenting systems, especially because these new systems appear to address the challenge of identifying the participants required for the complex research being conducted as the result of advances in the biomedical sciences.