![]() Designing effective risk communications for older adults. Safety Science. Avoiding harm on the farm: Human factors. Gerontechnology, 10(1), 26-37. What does Code Red mean? Ergonomics in Design, 2(4), 12. Are we ready? Misunderstanding homeland security safety symbols. Considering the warning context: New research methodologies and advances. Human Factors and Ergonomics in Manufacturing & Service Industries, 20 (6), 481-483. Journal of Injury Control and Safety Promotion, 11(4), 211-218. Hazards in the home: Using older adults’ perceptions to inform warning design. Warning the world of extreme events: A global perspective on risk communication for natural and technological disaster. Birth Defects Research Part A: Clinical and Molecular Teratology, 79(6), 494-506. Refining teratogen warning symbols for diverse populations. “New and improved”: The role text augmentation and the application of responses interpretation standards (coding schemes) in a final iteration of birth defects warnings development. Birth Defects Research Part A: Clinical and Molecular Teratology, 85(10), 864-871. Cognitive aging and the processing of hazard information and disaster warnings. Beyond abuse and exposure: Framing the impact of prescription medication sharing. Interpretation of pharmaceutical warnings among adolescents. Human Factors and Ergonomics in Manufacturing & Service Industries, 20 (6), 484-499. ![]() Warnings in manufacturing: Improving hazard mitigation messaging through audience analysis. Prescription medication sharing among adolescents: Prevelance, risks, and outcomes. Journal of Adolescent Health, 45(6), 634-637. Trusting the internet: Cues affecting perceived credibility. International Journal of Technology and Human Interaction, 4 (1), 76-94. Providing cognitive support with technology-based warning systems. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3962, 195-198. Persuasive pillboxes: Improving medication adherence with personal digital assistants. The effects of age and instructions on teaching older adults to use Eldercomm, an electronic bulletin board system. Educational Gerontology, 26, 221-235. World Wide Web use in middle-aged and older adults. Human Factors, 42(2), 175-182. Older adults, computer training, and the systems approach: A formula for success. Perfecting the handheld computer for older adults: From cognitive theory to practical application. Training users to counteract phishing. Work, 41, Supplement 1, 3549-3552. Personal digital assistants (PDAs) as medication reminding tools: Exploring age differences in usability. Gerontechnology, 4(3), 128-140. Age differences and transfer on control solution testing with blood glucometers. Work, 41, Supplement 1, 370-373. Predictors of electronic bulletin board system use in older adults. ![]() ![]() Association of Computing Machinery: Interactions, 13(3), 32-37. To download or not to download: An examination of computer security decision-making. The effect of age on event-based and time-based prospective memory. Decisions, decisions: Analysis of age, cohort, and time of testing on framing of risky decision options. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition, 14, 168-188. Comparing older and younger adults in an event-based prospective memory paradigm containing an output monitoring component. West’s comments on Leynes, Marsh, Hicks, Allen, & Mayhorn. Investigating the encoding and retrieval of intentions with Event-Related Potentials (ERPs). Exploring students’ prospective memory inside and outside the laboratory. American Journal of Psychology, 121(2), 241-254. Champagne, Beer, or Coffee?: A Corpus of Gender Related and Neutral Words Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, and Computers, 36 (3), 444-458. His nonprofessional interests include history, travel, and spending time with his wife, Susan, their son, Colin, their daughter, Sydney, and their keeshonden. Currently, Chris is serving on the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society (HFES) Government Relations Committee and as the Chair of the Technical Program Committee of HFES. Mayhorn has more than 50 peer-reviewed publications to his credit and his research has been funded by government agencies such as the National Science Foundation and the National Security Agency. Mayhorn’s current research interests include everyday memory, decision-making, human-computer interaction, safety and risk communication for older adult populations. He also completed a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Georgia Institute of Technology. (1995), a Graduate Certificate in Gerontology (1995), and a Ph.D. Mayhorn, Psychology Department Head and Professor in the Human Factors and Ergonomics Psychology program, joined the faculty at North Carolina State University in 2002.
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