Stephen Legg

Professor
Ergonomics
Massey University
New Zealand

Professor Healthcare
Biography

Dr. Stephen Legg is currently working as a Professor in the Department of Ergonomics, Massey univesity , Newzealand. His research interests includes Ergonomics; manual handling;;lifting and load carriage;backpack design; musculoskeletal symptoms; environmental physiology; hypoxia;dehydration; multiple mild stressors;cogntive function; heat and cold (thermal environments and climates); exercise physiology; occupational health and safety; working environment; small businesses.. He  is serving as an editorial member and reviewer of several international reputed journals. Dr. Stephen Legg is the member of many international affiliations. He has successfully completed his Administrative responsibilities. He  has authored of many research articles/books related to Ergonomics; manual handling;;lifting and load carriage;backpack design; musculoskeletal symptoms; environmental physiology; hypoxia;dehydration; multiple mild stressors;cogntive function; heat and cold (thermal environments and climates); exercise physiology; occupational health and safety; working environment; small businesses..

Research Intrest

Ergonomics; manual handling; musculoskeletal symptoms; environmental physiology; heat and cold ( thermal environments and climates); exercise physiology; occupational health and safety; working environment; small businesses.

List of Publications
Legg, SJ., Gilbey, AP., Hill, SR., Ramen, A., Dubray, A., Iremonger, G., . . . Mundel, T. (2015). Effects of mild hypoxia in aviation on mood and complex cognition. Applied Ergonomics. (0003-6870), 1-7
Mündel, T., Hill, S., & Legg, S. (2015). Hypohydration per se affects mood states and executive cognitive processing: Results from a face-valid model for studying some consequences of 'voluntary dehydration'. Extreme Physiology and Medicine. 4(1)
Laird, I., McBride, D., McLaren, SJ., Gardner, D., Hislop, R., Gray, J., . . . Page, WH. (2016). Noise sources, exposures and controls in small enterprises in New Zealand. New Zealand Acoustics. 29(1), 28-38 Retrieved from http://www.acoustics.org.nz/