EN 16710-2:2016
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Ergonomics methods - Part 2: A methodology for work analysis to support design
03-30-2016
European foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Terms and definitions
3 General requirements in specifying
the human components
4 Fundamentals
5 Elements of methodology
6 The work activity in the design process
7 Recording the process and reporting the outcomes
8 Coherence with other standards
Annex A (informative) - Example of requirements
specification to be integrated into tender
submission for ergonomics design for
work equipment
Annex B (informative) - Some techniques used for
work analysis in an ergonomic approach
Annex C (informative) - The approach and
ergonomic analysis applied to design:
Stages and processes
Bibliography
This European Standard describes a procedure for analysing human activity in relation to specifying and refining the human component in the design or redesign of machinery and work systems.NOTE 1The ergonomics methodology described in this European Standard could also be applied to the design or redesign of products and non-work systems.This European Standard is intended to assist project leaders in implementing human and physical resources, methods and schedules as well as in preparing the documents necessary to meeting related requirements.The ergonomics methodology described can be applied to all different stages in design projects from the earliest concept to the final “prototype” or “mock-up”, whatever the industrial field or sector.The objective of this European Standard is to achieve a solution that takes into account as many situations as possible which all users - including operators, maintenance staff and installers, may encounter. This will ultimately allow improved usability of the machinery and more robust technical solutions, combined with significantly greater system resilience, user autonomy and accessibility.NOTE 2Examples of the application of the methodology described in this European Standard are provided in Annex A.
Committee |
CEN/TC 122
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
PublisherName |
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
|
Status |
Current
|
Standards | Relationship |
UNE-EN 16710-2:2016 | Identical |
UNI EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
SN EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
NF EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
BS EN 16710-2:2016 | Identical |
I.S. EN 16710-2:2016 | Identical |
DIN EN 16710-2:2016-10 | Identical |
NS EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
NBN EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
NEN EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
PN EN 16710-2 : 2016 | Identical |
PNE-EN 16710-2 | Identical |
ISO 6385:2016 | Ergonomics principles in the design of work systems |
I.S. EN ISO 6385:2016 | ERGONOMIC PRINCIPLES IN THE DESIGN OF WORK SYSTEMS |
EN ISO 6385:2016 | Ergonomics principles in the design of work systems (ISO 6385:2016) |
BS EN ISO 6385:2016 | Ergonomics principles in the design of work systems |
ISO 10075-2:1996 | Ergonomic principles related to mental workload — Part 2: Design principles |
ISO 9241-11:1998 | Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display terminals (VDTs) Part 11: Guidance on usability |
EN ISO 9241-110:2006 | Ergonomics of human-system interaction - Part 110: Dialogue principles (ISO 9241-110:2006) |
EN 894-3:2000+A1:2008 | Safety of machinery - Ergonomics requirements for the design of displays and control actuators - Part 3: Control actuators |
EN ISO 10075-1:2017 | Ergonomic principles related to mental workload - Part 1: General issues and concepts, terms and definitions (ISO 10075-1:2017) |
ISO 9241-110:2006 | Ergonomics of human-system interaction Part 110: Dialogue principles |
EN 981:1996+A1:2008 | Safety of machinery - System of auditory and visual danger and information signals |
EN 894-2:1997+A1:2008 | Safety of machinery - Ergonomics requirements for the design of displays and control actuators - Part 2: Displays |
EN ISO 9241-11:1998 | Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display terminals (VDTs) - Part 11: Guidance on usability (ISO 9241-11:1998) |
EN 60073:2002 | Basic and safety principles for man-machine interface, marking and identification - Coding principles for indicators and actuators |
ISO 9241-210:2010 | Ergonomics of human-system interaction Part 210: Human-centred design for interactive systems |
EN 614-2:2000+A1:2008 | Safety of machinery - Ergonomic design principles - Part 2: Interactions between the design of machinery and work tasks |
EN 13861:2011 | Safety of machinery - Guidance for the application of ergonomics standards in the design of machinery |
EN ISO 10075-2:2000 | Ergonomic principles related to mental workload - Part 2: Design principles (ISO 10075-2:1996) |
EN ISO 11064-7:2006 | Ergonomic design of control centres - Part 7: Principles for the evaluation of control centres (ISO 11064-7:2006) |
EN 614-1:2006+A1:2009 | Safety of machinery - Ergonomic design principles - Part 1: Terminology and general principles |
EN ISO 26800:2011 | Ergonomics - General approach, principles and concepts (ISO 26800:2011) |
ISO 12100:2010 | Safety of machinery — General principles for design — Risk assessment and risk reduction |
ISO 26800:2011 | Ergonomics — General approach, principles and concepts |
ISO/IEC TR 25060:2010 | Systems and software engineering — Systems and software product Quality Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) — Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability: General framework for usability-related information |
EN ISO 6385:2016 | Ergonomics principles in the design of work systems (ISO 6385:2016) |
EN ISO 12100:2010 | Safety of machinery - General principles for design - Risk assessment and risk reduction (ISO 12100:2010) |
EN ISO 9241-210:2010 | Ergonomics of human-system interaction - Part 210: Human-centred design for interactive systems (ISO 9241-210:2010) |
ISO 10075:1991 | Ergonomic principles related to mental work-load General terms and definitions |
ISO 6385:2016 | Ergonomics principles in the design of work systems |
EN 894-4:2010 | Safety of machinery - Ergonomics requirements for the design of displays and control actuators - Part 4: Location and arrangement of displays and control actuators |
ISO 11064-7:2006 | Ergonomic design of control centres — Part 7: Principles for the evaluation of control centres |
EN 894-1:1997+A1:2008 | Safety of machinery - Ergonomics requirements for the design of displays and control actuators - Part 1: General principles for human interactions with displays and control actuators |
Access your standards online with a subscription
Features
-
Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.
-
Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.
-
Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.