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A. Ant Ozok

Researcher at University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Publications -  56
Citations -  2809

A. Ant Ozok is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The author has contributed to research in topics: Usability & Social computing. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 56 publications receiving 2475 citations. Previous affiliations of A. Ant Ozok include University of Maryland, Baltimore & Purdue University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

SEIPS 2.0: A human factors framework for studying and improving the work of healthcare professionals and patients

TL;DR: An extended model of the SEIPS, SEIPS 2.0 is a new human factors/ergonomics framework for studying and improving health and healthcare that describes how sociotechnical systems shape health-related work done by professionals and non-professionals, independently and collaboratively.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A comparison of perceived and real shoulder-surfing risks between alphanumeric and graphical passwords

TL;DR: Findings indicate that configuring data entry for Passfaces™ through a keyboard is the most effective deterrent to shoulder-surfing in a laboratory setting and the participants' perceptions were consistent with that result.
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Time to accelerate integration of human factors and ergonomics in patient safety

TL;DR: An overview of the discipline of human factors and ergonomics is given and its role in improving patient safety is described and five major recommendations are provided to better integrate human factor and ergonomic principles in patient safety improvement efforts.
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Perceived security determinants in e-commerce among Turkish university students

TL;DR: The aims of this study were to determine items that positively influence this feeling of security by users during shopping, and to develop guidelines for perceived security in e-commerce.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using an interdisciplinary approach to identify factors that affect clinicians' compliance with evidence-based guidelines.

TL;DR: An interdisciplinary approach is needed to improve clinicians' compliance with evidence-based guidelines and the conceptual framework from this research can provide a comprehensive and systematic guide to identify barriers to guideline compliance and design effective interventions to improve patient safety.