anthropotechnical

English edit

Etymology edit

anthropo- +‎ technical

Adjective edit

anthropotechnical (not comparable)

  1. Relating to anthropotechnics.
    • 1906, Howard Jason Rogers, editor, Congress of Arts and Science: Universal Exposition, St. Louis, 1904[1], volume 5:
      Without such interpretation there may exist museums or even chairs of anthropology, but not an anthropology; not that anthropology which answers to the mandate γνῶθι σεαυτόν, and from which, together with sociology, the anthropotechnical arts await the light of which they stand so greatly in need.
    • 1984, The Brown Boveri Review, volume 71, page 353:
      Ergonomic and anthropotechnical considerations are therefore of prime importance for the picture configuration, a further aspect to be taken into account being the man/process communication.
    • 2011, Sio-Iong Ao, Intelligent Automation and Systems Engineering[2], page 186:
      Assessment scenarios of virtual prototype are realized in dispersed software environment and enables including of conditions present in operational and emergency states of mining anthropotechnical systems.