Books are nice. Periodicals are current, sometimes more lively, and present information in smaller chunks. But if you're new to ergonomics, relevant periodicals are hard to find. Here are some suggestions. None of them deals exclusively with office ergonomics, but IMHO they're all worthwhile for the office ergonomist.
Ergonomics in Design
310-394-1811
$41/year
Does reading ergonomics have to be a slog-through? This is one of
two high-quality periodicals that give great information in almost-normal
language. Maybe this is because it's written for, and usually by,
practitioners rather than academic scholars. Its scope is human
factors, not just ergonomics, and the practitioner orientation is backed
up by attention to the research that's the basis of good practice.
Click here to go to
EiD's web page.
Ergonomics Abstracts
Price varies
Ergonomics Abstracts is a very worthwhile ergonomics research database published by a leader in ergonomics,
Taylor and Francis.
It provides about everything in the journals and many conferences, plus all the Taylor & Francis books. In other words, it can take the place of looking through journals (though EA always lags the journals by some time).