BS ISO 1503:2008
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Spatial orientation and direction of movement. Ergonomic requirements
Hardcopy , PDF
English
30-09-2009
Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Design of spatial orientation and direction of movement
4.1 General
4.2 Ergonomic design of user interface (UI) with respect
to orientation and direction
4.3 Steps in direction design
4.4 Design requirements/recommendations for human-machine
interface (HMI)
4.5 Design recommendations for graphical user interfaces
(GUI)
4.6 Design recommendations for combined control systems
5 Conformance
5.1 Applying requirements and recommendations
5.2 Evaluation of products
Annex A (informative) - Constituent factors of usability
Annex B (normative) - Reference model for spatial orientation
and direction of movement
Annex C (informative) - Flow of human-centred design
activities
Annex D (informative) - Spatial orientation and direction of
movement design checklist
Bibliography
Provides design principles, procedures, requirements and recommendations for the spatial orientation and direction of movement of controls and displays used in tool machines, industrial robots, office machines, earth-moving machinery, transportation (automobiles, railway electric cars/rolling stock, aircraft, ships, etc.), information, daily commodities, public utilities and the operational components of building facilities.
Committee |
PH/9
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
Pages |
52
|
PublisherName |
British Standards Institution
|
Status |
Current
|
This International Standard sets out design principles, procedures, requirements and recommendations for the spatial orientation and direction of movement of controls and displays used in tool machines, industrial robots, office machines, earth-moving machinery, transportation (automobiles, railway electric cars/rolling stock, aircraft, ships, etc.), information, daily commodities, public utilities and the operational components of building facilities.
It lays down basic requirements for determining the operating direction of controls and the moving directions or changing states of the target object, as well as other relations.
This International Standard
-
defines three dimensional axes, the observer, viewing systems, linear movement, rotary movement, two-dimensional and three-dimensional movements in a dynamic space sequentially,
-
describes the four principles for determining the operating direction of a control, the moving direction of a target object and/or display,
-
provides GUI (graphical user interface) design requirements and recommendations that integrate the relationship between the computer operation and the movement of images on-screen in line with human characteristics and to promote safety and efficiency in computer-assisted tasks,
-
sets out design principles and recommendations for determining the moving directions of a target object and the controls of a combined control system using a multi-direction control that easily realizes the complex operations intended by the user/operator as they are often seen in industrial apparatuses for business use, and
-
gives principles and recommendations for the direction design of existing, as well as new, systems.
NOTE Ergonomics requirements or recommendations given in this International Standard can also be applied to designing the direction of movement of other industrial goods, such as medical equipment, TV or PC game devices and relevant machines/devices.
Standards | Relationship |
ISO 1503:2008 | Identical |
ISO 9241-11:1998 | Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display terminals (VDTs) Part 11: Guidance on usability |
ISO 9241-110:2006 | Ergonomics of human-system interaction Part 110: Dialogue principles |
IEC 61131-1:2003 | Programmable controllers - Part 1: General information |
ISO 9355-1:1999 | Ergonomic requirements for the design of displays and control actuators — Part 1: Human interactions with displays and control actuators |
IEC 60447:2004 | Basic and safety principles for man-machine interface, marking and identification - Actuating principles |
ISO 9355-3:2006 | Ergonomic requirements for the design of displays and control actuators — Part 3: Control actuators |
ISO 6385:2016 | Ergonomics principles in the design of work systems |
ISO 13407:1999 | Human-centred design processes for interactive systems |
ISO 9355-2:1999 | Ergonomic requirements for the design of displays and control actuators — Part 2: Displays |
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