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allowance  the difference between normal time and standard time, which consists of planned nonworking time.
allowance factor  the proportion of time that the workers are taking breaks, or experiencing delays, etc..
ergonomics  the incorporation of human factors in the design of the workplace.
flow process chart  a symbolic chart that shows the sequence of operations and tasks performed by an employee in a particular job.
job design  assigning tasks and planning the working environment and system for an employee or a group of employees, taking into account the costs and benefits of the alternatives available.
job enlargement  giving an employee a greater number of tasks without a corresponding shift to another assignment or a higher level of responsibility.
job enrichment  increasing the level of responsibility of an employee as a motivation towards better performance.
job rotation  varying assignments among a group of employees by shifting tasks and responsibilities.
knowledge-based pay  a pay system used by organizations to reward employees who undergo training that increases their skills.
methods analysis  studying the requirements of a job in order to propose new and possibly better ways to perform it.
micromotion study  the use of motion pictures and slow motion to study motions that otherwise would be too rapidto analyze.
motion study  a technique for studying the human motions needed to perform an operation or series of tasks, developed originally by Frank and Lillian Gilbreth.
normal time  the observed time adjusted by a rating factor for the worker's performance or speed in accomplishing the operation..
observed time  the average of the measured times for a task.
occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)  the federal agency that has the responsibility for administering laws relating to employee and workplace safety.
output-based (incentive) systems  compensation based on the amount of output which an employee produced during a pay period.
performance rating  a factor assigned by an analyst reflecting a judgment as to whether the worker was working rapidly or slowly..
random number table  a table of random numbers with many uses; in the context of Chapter 7, it is used to establish random times for making observations in work sampling.
Self-directed teams  groups empowered to make certain changes in the work processes.
specialization  work that concentrates on some aspect of a product or service.
standard elemental times  standard times for jobs or tasks derived from historical data, rather than from current time-study data.
standard time  the normal time plus an allowance for breaks, maintenance, etc.
stopwatch time study  a widely used method of work measurement, developed by F. W. Taylor, for establishing the standard times for relatively small repetitive tasks.
therblig (Gilbreth spelled backward)  an elementary unit of human motion in a motion study: common therbligs are search select, grasp, hold, transport loaded, and release load.
time-based compensation systems  systems of compensation based on the amount of clock time an employee works.
worker-machine chart  a chart that displays the portions of a work cycle in which the worker and the machine are active or idle.
work measurement  see stopwatch time study.
work sampling  a statistical technique for estimating the proportion of time that a worker or machine sends on various activities or is idle.
z-statistic  the unit normal deviate of the standard normal distribution that is used to look up probabilities in the normal probability table.







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