OPINION OF THE COURT
This is a products liability case, Restatement of Torts 2d § 402A, arising out of a construction accident in which the treads of a huge road profiler machine ran over the foot of plaintiff Michael Surace. Surace brought suit against CMI Corporation (“CMI”), the manufacturer of the machine, in the district court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. 1 The district court, concluding that the evidence contained in the summary judgment record failed to demonstrate that the profi-ler’s risks outweighed its utility, and also *1042 that the profiler presented an obvious risk which could have been avoided had Surace exercised reasonable care, granted summary judgment in favor of CMI. Surace appealed.
Resolution of the appeal requires us to explore the contours of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in
Azzarello v. Black Bros. Co.,
The appeal then requires that we apply the risk-utility factors to our plenary review of the district court’s judgment. When we do so, we find that the risk-utility balance weighs in favor of the plaintiff. In particular, we conclude that the district court erred: (1) in determining that the gravity of the risk of harm and the ability to eliminate it through use of a lockout/tagout device, identified by Surace’s expert as the design solution to the defect, were factors weighing in favor of CMI; (2) in relying on Surace’s own conduct to determine. that the profiler was not unreasonably dangerous; and (3) in weighing the issue of causation as a factor in resolving that question. We also conclude that putative alternative grounds for upholding the summary judgment for CMI do not pass muster. Accordingly, we will reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
However, we will affirm the district court’s judgment insofar as it excluded Suraee’s expert witness Harold Brink from testifying under Fed.R.Evid. 702. We agree that Brink lacks the expertise required to testify regarding the central issue of design defect in the case — habituation. Accordingly, the district court properly excluded Brink’s testimony.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the night of September 16, 1992, Su-raee, an employee of SJA Construction Company, was working on the New Jersey side of the Betsy Ross Bridge. The work crew was using a PR-450 pavement profiler, which had been manufactured by CMI for Caterpillar, Inc., to mill rumble strips at the base of the bridge. The profiler had been equipped with a conveyor assembly which picked up and carried debris generated by the profiler to a waiting receptacle. However, due to space constraints, the crew was operating the profi-ler without the conveyor assembly. Consequently, the crew was required to level manually the piles of debris left behind by the profiler.
On the night of the accident, Surace was working as a left-side sensor man. In this position, he was responsible for signaling the profiler’s operator, William Snyder, when to start and stop the profiler, and in which direction to move it. Although the profiler was equipped with horns on the side specifically designed for signaling the operator, Su-race was using hand signals to signal Snyder. The profiler’s design contained a “blind spot,” i.e., the operator’s view of the area directly behind the machine was obstructed.
The profiler was equipped with a number of warning devices, including a sign prominently posted on its rear alerting the crew to stay at least 25 feet clear of the machine, an automatic back-up alarm, flashing back-up lights, and a rotating overhead beacon light which signaled when the profiler was in operation. These warning or signaling devices were all in working condition on the night of the accident. Surace was wearing earplugs *1043 to protect his ears from the considerable noise created by the machine.
After the first pass of the profiler, Surace signaled Snyder to stop. After moving the profiler forward, Snyder did so. Surace then noticed a pile of debris in the reverse pathway of the profiler which the machiné had generated. Surace picked up a broom or shovel, and, with his back to the machine, began to level the debris. While Surace was behind the machine, and without any signal from Surace, Snyder put the profiler into reverse. Athough the back-up alarms and signals were activated, Surace neither heard nor saw them, nor did he hear the shouts from his crew workers to move out of the way. The profiler backed into Surace and snared his right foot under the treads. As a result of the accident, Surace sustained serious injuries, necessitating the amputation of part of his right foot.
Surace and his wife Alice (Surace) filed suit against Caterpillar and CMI alleging negligence and strict liability for defective design. 3 Surace subsequently dropped the negligence claim and, by stipulation of the parties, Caterpillar was dismissed from the action. The complaint alleged that the profi-ler was defectively designed because its warning devices were inadequate. Specifically, Surace alleged that the back-up alarms were prone to “habituation,” a phenomenon by which a person becomes immune to a particular stimulus through constant repetition and exposure, and that without a “lockout/tagout” device, which would prevent the machine from reversing unless activated by the ground crew, the profiler was unreasonably dangerous.
Following a period of discovery, CMI moved
in limine
to exclude the testimony of Surace’s liability experts, Joseph Lambert, Harold Brink and Paul Stephens, pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 702, 703, and 403. Both Dr. Lambert, a psychologist and specialist in human factors analysis, and Brink, an electromechanical engineer, were to testify that the profiler’s warning devices were defective because they were prone to habituation. Stephens, a mechanical and safety engineer, was to testify that the warning devices were inadequate, and that the failure to equip the machine with additional safety devices caused the accident. Ater conducting an
in limine
hearing, the district court denied the motion with respect to Lambert and Stephens, but granted it with respect to Brink.
Surace v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
No. CIV.A. 94-1422,
CMI then moved for summary judgment, arguing,
inter alia,
that the profiler was safe for its intended use. As noted above, the district court granted summary judgment for CMI on the grounds that the. evidence failed to demonstrate that the profiler’s risks outweighed its utility, and that the profiler presented an obvious risk which could have been avoided if Surace had exercised reasonable care.
Surace v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
No. CIV.A. 94-1422,
We exercise plenary review in determining the propriety of summary judgment.
Childers v. Joseph,
II. THE AZZARÉLLO THRESHOLD ANALYSIS
A. Introduction
Pennsylvania early on adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts as the law of strict products liability in Pennsylvania.
Webb v. Zern,
(1) One who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer ... is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused *1044 to the ultimate user or consumer, or to his property, if (a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product, and (b) it is expected to and does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold.
Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965). To establish a case under the strict liability doctrine, a plaintiff must prove that the product was defective, and that the defect proximate-iy caused the plaintiffs injuries.
Berkebile v. Brantly Helicopter Corp.,
In
Azzarello v. Black Bros. Co.,
Should an ill-conceived design which exposes the user to the risk of harm entitle one injured by the product to recover? Should adequate warnings of the dangerous propensities of an article insulate one who suffers injuries from those propensities? When does the utility of a product outweigh the unavoidable danger it may pose? These are questions of law and their resolution depends upon social policy.
Id.
at 558,
B. Risk-Utility Analysis
Because we are sitting in diversity, we are, of course, required to the extent necessary to our decision to predict how the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would apply the
Azzarello
standard. In doing so, we give “ ‘due regard’ to the decisions of Pennsylvania’s intermediate appellate courts as ‘indicia of how the state’s highest court would decidé a matter.’ ”
Nowak,
Absent further guidance from the Supreme Court, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has determined that in performing the social policy analysis, a court must play a dual role, acting as both a “social philosopher” and a “risk-utility economic analyst.”
Fitzpatrick v. Madonna,
The Superior Court’s approach in this respect seems consistent with the tenor of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s § 402A jurisprudence. Indeed, in
Azzarello,
the Supreme Court indicated that a risk-utility in
*1045
quiry may be appropriate in performing the social policy analysis.
Azzarello,
To be sure, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has rejected the risk-utility approach to
defining
design defect in favor of the “intended use” approach.
Lewis v. Coffing Hoist Div., Duff-Norton Co.,
At all events, Lewis does not purport to cut back on Azzarello, and the discussion in Lewis that seems to have caused some confusion is background and arguably dicta; the question for decision in Lewis was whether evidence of industry standards was admissible in a design case. We do not minimize the background discussion, and observe that it seems quite correct (as well as consistent with Azzarello, for it establishes no more than that the known hazards of products such as cigarettes or alcohol, see supra n. 6 or, presumably, cigarette lighters, see supra n. 7, do not automatically render their manufacturers or sellers liable on the theory that their utility is outweighed by the risks of their usage). Rather, Lewis established only that, after the threshold Azzarello determination by the court, the jury must determine whether, under the facts, the product, at the time it left the defendant’s control, lacked any element necessary to make it safe for its intended use or contained any condition that made it unsafe for use. See Pennsylvania Suggested Standard Civil Jury Instructions § 8.02 (Definition of “Defect”).
In sum, our prediction that Pennsylvania would employ a risk-utility analysis in making the threshold Azzarello determination is not inconsistent with Lewis, and we affirm the district court’s use of a risk-utility analysis in determining whether the risk of loss should be placed on CMI.
We regret that the Supreme Court has not yet spoken definitively on the matter of risk-utility analysis or its component factors. Since it is almost twenty years since
Azzarel-lo,
we hope that the Court will speak definitively soon. Unfortunately, we do not have a certification procedure,
see generally Hakimoglu v. Trump Taj Mahal
Assoc.,
C. The Wade Factors
Absent guidance from the state Supreme Court, the Superior Court has also identified factors that may be considered in making the threshold risk-utility analysis, including the following list developed by Dean John Wade:
(1) The usefulness and desirability of the product — its utility to the user and to the public as a whole; (2) The safety aspects of the product — the likelihood that it will cause injury, and the probable seriousness of the injury; (3) The availability of a substitute product which would meet the same need and not be as unsafe; (4) The manufacturer’s ability to eliminate the unsafe character of the product without impairing its usefulness or making it too expensive to maintain its utility; (5) The user’s ability to avoid danger by the exercise of care in the use of the product; (6) The user’s anticipated awareness of the dangers inherent in the product and their avoidability, because of general public knowledge of the obvious condition of the product, or of the existence of suitable warnings or instruction; and (7) The feasibility, on the part of the manufacturer, of spreading the loss of [sic] setting the price of the product or carrying liability insurance.
Dambacher v. Mallis,
On appeal Suraee submits that CMI should have altered the design of the profiler by equipping it with additional safeguards such as a transmission lock (a “loekout/tagout device”). 8 We turn our attention to the various Wade factors.
1. Gravity of the Risk of Harm and Ability to Eliminate It Through Use of the Lockout/Tagout Device (Wade Factors Two and Four)
The gravamen of Surace’s argument is that the profiler was defective and unreasonably dangerous because of the combination of the “blind spot” and the phenomenon of habituation, and that this defect could have been eliminated through the use of a lockout/tag-out device, which would prevent the operator from engaging the profiler in reverse until a switch is activated by ground personnel. The device would incorporate the safety engineering technique of lockouVtagout, a concept .which, according to Surace’s expert, although not currently in use for this specific purpose, has been proven and tested, particularly in the area of machine maintenance. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has defined a lockout device as one that “utilizes a positive means such as a lock ... to hold an energy isolating device in a safe position and prevent the energizing of a machine or equipment.” See 29 C.F.R. § 1910.147(b)(1996). In this ease, it would prevent the operator “from inadvertently releasing the energy” and reversing the profi-ler without affirmative action by the ground crew.
Suraee contends that, in rejecting this theory, the district court failed to view the evidence in the light most favorable to him.
Barker v. Deere Co.,
Lambert’s report, which provided a human factors analysis of the accident, was based on collected accident reports, the results of noise measurements taken of the profiler, and human factors literature. In his deposition testimony, Lambert admitted that, although it was feasible, he had not tested Surace to determine whether or not he was habituated. He further opined that, “because Mr. Surace had been around this piece of equipment for such a long period of time, for months, that he habituated to this alert. And that habituation became a long-term habituation that could carry from day to day.” Thus, although he did not note it in his report, Lambert did conclude that Surace had become habituated, and he further explained how Surace could be habituated on the profiler’s first pass of the evening. In view of the fact that Lambert’s testimony was before the court as part of the summary judgment record, the district court was not at liberty to ignore it. Moreover, because the habituation issue will go to the jury in its determination as to whether the profiler was unsafe for its intended use, the district court could not resolve any dispute over the issue at that stage.
We underscore that, in the
Azzarello
context, the case would not become one for the jury if the district court were able to hold as a matter of law that the risk-utility balance so favored the manufacturer that the profiler could not be deemed unreasonably dangerous.
See Barker,
Applying the fourth Wade factor, the district court rejected Surace’s contention that, because of the phenomenon of habituation, the profiler should have been equipped with a loekoui/tagout device. As proffered, the lockout/tagout device would prevent the operator from engaging the profiler in reverse until a ground worker activated a switch. As currently designed, the profiler relies on horns located on the sides of the machine which must be activated by ground personnel, who, after visual inspection, signal the operator that it is clear to reverse. It is undisputed that on the night of the accident, Surace was using hand signals rather than these horns to signal the operator and that the operator put the profiler in reverse without waiting for a signal from Surace. The district court concluded that there was no evidence that the profiler was defective without a loekoui/tagout device. It noted that Surace’s expert, Stephens, was unaware of any profiler with this device, and concluded that he could not therefore attest to the technological or economic feasibility of such a device.
In his report, Stephens explained that the machine was inherently dangerous without a lockout/tagout device because of its “blind spot,” coupled with the fact that crew members were required to work in close proximity to it. Stephen’s Report at 3 (“severity of hazard and frequency of laborer exposure to the hazard dictated that [such a device] be provided on the machine”). Stephens further stated that the lockout/tagout device was both technically and economically feasible. In concluding that he had not shown
*1049
that the device was mechanically feasible, the district court emphasized that Stephens did not know of any currently designed construction machinery that uses the device. That conclusion, however, runs afoul of our decision in
Barker,
where we held that “a district court, during its threshold determination, may [not] consider the nonexistence of a safety device as evidence of its nonfeasibility.”
Barker,
Although Stephens admitted that the device was not currently employed by construction machinery for this purpose, he repeatedly testified that such a device was used in other applications, that the concept had been tested and proven on machines comparable to the profiler, and that it could be applied to work for this specific purpose. We have previously held that expert testimony alone may be sufficient, for purposes of summary judgment, to demonstrate feasibility,
see Hollinger v. Wagner Mining Equip. Co.,
Finally, the district court concluded that there was insufficient evidence from which to determine whether the profiler would be safer if equipped with a lockout/tagout device. Emphasizing that, as currently designed, the profiler relies on the crew to signal the operator that it is safe to reverse, the court concluded that the lockout/tagout device performs the same function and, because it relies on crew members to activate the device, “provides no assurance that human error as occurred here” would not cause another accident.
Surace,
In sum, while such a design could not entirely eliminate the possibility that
after
the machine was put into motion a crew worker could walk into its pathway, it would obviously render the machine safer. This conclusion is “in sync” with the Pennsylvania courts’ approach to determining whether the risk of loss should be placed on the manufacturer. The court must balance “the utility of the product against the seriousness and likelihood of the injury and the availability of
*1050
precautions that,
though not foolproof,
might prevent the injury.”
Burch,
Couching this discussion in terms of the Wade factors, since it appears that the lockout/tagout device could eliminate the unsafe character of the product and since it does not appear that the lockout/tagout device would be expensive or would otherwise impair the utility of the profiler, the second and fourth Wade factors weigh in favor of Surace. Therefore, unless other factors control the balance, the case must be submitted to the jury-
2. Consideration of Surace’s Conduct and the Fifth Wade Factor
In finding that the profiler’s risks were not outweighed by its utility, the court concluded that the accident could likely have been avoided had Surace exercised due care. Specifically; the court found that because Surace was an experienced construction worker, fully aware of the dangers posed by the profi-ler, his conduct in wearing earplugs and turning his back to the machine while standing in its pathway was both careless and a cause of the accident. The court observed that “[i]t would be unjust to burden CMI with liability in a situation where there is clear evidence that Mr. Surace’s own lack of care played a role in bringing about the accident.”
Surace,
Pennsylvania courts generally bar consideration of contributory negligence, in strict liability actions.
See Kimco Dev. Corp. v. Michael D’s Carpet,
An individual plaintiffs failure to exercise care in the use of a product is not relevant to whether the product is unreasonably dangerous in the first place.
See Fleck, v. KDI Sylvan Pools Inc.,
The district court believed that by endorsing the Wade factors, specifically, the fifth factor, (the user’s ability to avoid danger by the exercise of care in the use of the product), the Pennsylvania Superior Court has expressly sanctioned consideration of a product user’s conduct in failing to exercise care as an appropriate factor in performing the threshold analysis. Although the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has not sanctioned use of the Wade factors, we have predicted that it will.
See supra
at 1046. That prediction nonetheless admits of the possibility that the court will adopt some but not all of the Wade factors. We note that at least one justice has commented on the limitations of these factors in one respect.
See Sherk v. Daisy-Heddon,
In applying the fifth Wade factor, the district court looked to Surace’s conduct, rather than to an ordinary product user’s conduct. We believe that it erred in so doing. The Wade factors set forth an objective test to determine whether a product is defective; the “user” referred to in the factors is the ordinary consumer who purchases or uses the product.
Williams v. Briggs Co.,
The proper focus in applying the fifth Wade factor then is an objective inquiry into whether the class of ordinary purchasers of the product could avoid injury through the exercise of care in use of the product, not whether this particular plaintiff could have avoided this particular injury. Put differently, the user’s ability to avoid injury by the exercise of care in the use of the product appears to be a design factor that may justify a more or less exacting design depending on the facts, but it is, in any case, not a vehicle for injecting a plaintiffs (alleged) failure to exercise due care into the case. Thus, the district court misapplied this factor.
We acknowledge that, notwithstanding the foregoing discussion, it is unclear whether the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would endorse even an
objective
application of the fifth Wade factor in performing the
Azzarello
threshold analysis. The court has held that the existence of due care in strict liability cases is irrelevant,' both with respect to the supplier and the consumer.
Berkebile,
As Dean Wade explained in his seminal article enunciating the factors, the focus of the inquiry is on the product:
Suppose that a consumer buys and wears shoes that are too little or tires that are too large for his automobile, or that he uses the product without following instructions. If he is injured as a result and brings suit, the problem may be posed in terms of whether he was at fault and whether his fault should bar recovery in an action based on strict liability. The initial, and really significant, problem is whether the product was duly safe or not. A good pair of shoes size 5 is not unduly unsafe because it may be worn by a woman with feet size 7____ A product with adequate instruction for its safe use may as a result be duly safe, and it is not rendered unsafe by the fact that the consumer did not follow the instructions....
Further illustrations easily present themselves. There is no drug, and perhaps no food, that is not dangerous if too much of it is consumed. It is missing the real point to pose the issue in terms of whether the plaintiff was eontributorily negligent in taking too many pills or too much food.
Wade, supra, at 846 (footnotes omitted). The analysis does not center on the due care vel non of the consumer but rather highlights whether a product is duly safe for its intended use. This is true of all of the Wade factors. For example, the focus of the sixth factor, which considers “the user’s anticipated awareness of the dangers inherent in the product and their avoidability, because of general public knowledge of the obvious condition of the product, or of the existence of suitable warnings or instruction,” is on the product:
[T]he dangers of a hoe or an axe are both matters of common knowledge and fully apparent to the user. But it is not necessarily sufficient to render a product duly safe that its dangers are obvious, especially if the dangerous condition could have been eliminated. A rotary lawn mower, for example, which had no housing to protect a user from the whirling blade would not be treated as duly safe, despite the obvious character of the danger.
Note that the question here is whether the product possesses the quality of due safety, not whether the plaintiff assumed the risk or was eontributorily negligent.
Id. at 842-43.
Thus, insofar as the fifth Wade factor inquires into the (objective) conduct of the average product user as a factor that may justify a more or less exacting design depending on the facts, it seems to be an appropriate ingredient in the Wade risk-utility balance, which itself seems a useful approach to performing the
Azzarello
threshold analysis. We thus predict that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would follow that approach. But only that Court can tell us,
see Hakimoglu,
Properly applying the fifth Wade factor to determine the objective user’s ability to avoid danger by the exercise of care in the use of the profiler, we find that the factor weighs slightly in Suraee’s favor. Although an individual working on the ground behind the profiler could, in theory, avoid danger by exercising care to always remain out of the machine’s blind spot, it seems likely that ordinary workers at a highway construction site will occasionally find it necessary to step *1053 behind the machine, and that such workers may, like Surace, be habituated to the profi-ler’s alarm and thus unable to avoid danger if the profiler’s operator backs up without signaling.
3. Other Wade Factors
We do not discuss the other Wade factors except in passing because they are either neutral or favor Surace in the risk-utility balance. The profiler is, of course, useful and desirable. (Wade factor one) There does not appear to be a substitute product that would meet the same need and not be unsafe, (factor three) Finally, it seems feasible for the manufacturers to spread any loss implicated by a safer design in a variety of ways, (factor seven)
4. Summary
We have rejected both the factual and legal bases of the district court’s holding that the profiler was not defective as a matter of law, and conclude that the threshold Azzarel-lo test has been met. Specifically, when we evaluate the risk-utility factors in the light most favorable to Surace, we conclude that the profiler may pose a grave risk of harm absent a lockout/tagout device, in view of the phenomenon of habituation. The summary judgment must therefore be set aside and the case must go to the jury, though, of course, the jury may find for the defendant if it determines that the facts do not support a finding of defect. See supra at 1045-46.
There is, however, one other problem in the case — that presented by the district court’s conflation of the causation issue into the Azzarello analysis.
III. CAUSATION; SEPARABILITY FROM AZZARELLO ANALYSIS
In a footnote in its opinion, the district court indicated that, although contributory negligence is irrelevant in a strict liability case, consideration of Surace’s conduct in wearing the earplugs and turning his back to the machine was appropriate as part of the
Azzarello
threshold analysis to the extent that it bears on causation.
Surace,
There are two elements to a strict liability claim. The plaintiff must establish that: (1) the product was defective; and (2) the defect was a proximate cause of the injury.
See Berkebile,
If the plaintiff ultimately proves that the product is defective, then the distinct question of whether the defect proximately caused the injury must be resolved.
Pacheco v. Coats Co.,
IV. ALTERNATIVE GROUNDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
CMI moved for summary judgment on several alternative grounds that the district court did not reach. In view of the foregoing discussion, we must reach them.
See United States v. Taylor,
A. intended Use
The district court observed in a footnote in its opinion that the evidence suggested the profiler was not being used as intended at the time of the accident. Under
Azzarello,
the inquiry is whether the product was safe for its
intended
use.
Azzarello,
On appeal, CMI continues to assert that liability should not be imposed because the profiler was not used as intended. CMI submits that the profiler was not meant to mill rumble strips, and that it was not meant to be operated without the conveyor attached. Because the profiler was being operated without the conveyor attached, the debris generated by it had to be picked up manually. At the time of the accident, Su-race'was sweeping or shoveling debris out of its pathway. Surace testified that this was both the first time he had ever worked with the profiler without the conveyor attached, or that anyone had been injured when the machine was in back-up mode.
It is clear that “[u]nless the use giving rise to a strict liability cause of action is a reasonably obvious misuse ... or unless the particular use ... is clearly warned against, the manufacturer is not obviously exonerated.”
Metzgar v. Playskool, Inc.,
B. Assumption of Risk
CMI argues that it is entitled to summary judgment because Surace assumed the risk of his injuries. Assumption of the risk is a viable defense to strict liability actions.
McCown v. International Harvester Co.,
CMI asserts that Surace was aware of the danger of being in the path of the profiler while it was operating. To infer assumption of the risk from Surace’s conduct, the conduct “must be such as fairly to indicate that [Surace was] willing to take his chances.”
Wagner,
V. BRINK’S EXPERT TESTIMONY
Surace challenges the district court’s exclusion of Harold R. Brink as an expert witness. Surace had proffered Brink, an electromechanical engineer, to testify to the inadequacy of the profiler’s warning devices from an engineering standpoint. Brink’s “expert opinion” was that the profiler was defective because of the obstructed view, and that the back-up alarm was insufficient to alert crew workers because of the phenomenon of habituation. The district court excluded Brink’s testimony, concluding that he did not meet the Supreme Court’s test for the admission of expert witnesses set forth in
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
The district court excluded Brink’s testimony under Fed.R.Evid. 702, which provides:
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.
The first requirement under Rule 702 is that the witness “proffered to testify to specialized knowledge must be an expert.”
Paoli,
Brink earned a degree in electrical engineering from Lehigh University and has had an extensive career in electrical and mechanical engineering, including twenty years of employment with Mack Trucks. However, as the district court noted, Brink’s theory of liability “hinged on habituation,” an area in which Brink has no training and no experience. Surace contends that through his work experience, Brink “has become highly familiar with the concept of habituation and the need to avoid this phenomenon when designing construction machinery.” But the record does not support this contention. Regarding habituation, Brink only averred generally that “over the years, I’ve learned that people can tune things out.” Significantly, his testimony focuses on making the machines “user friendly” as opposed to considering the safety implications of a device. 16
Moreover, there is no evidence in the record that Brink had experience in designing equipment from a human safety standpoint. Indeed, in his deposition testimony, Brink testified that he did not design back-up alarms; rather they were purchased by Mack and he would make sure they were mounted and wired properly. Brink further stated that he did not remember ever having tested back-up alarms, and that his knowledge of back-up alarm systems is limited to the extent to which they could be considered *1056 part of the design of an electrieal/mechanical system.
Although he was a member in the Human Factors Society, Brink admitted that he had not read any literature on the phenomenon of habituation stemming from the alarms on construction machinery, nor had he ever participated in a habituation testing or study. Most significantly, Brink admitted that he relied on Dr. Lambert as the sole authoritative basis for his conclusions regarding habituation. Indeed, when questioned about the specifics of habituation, Brink replied “I’ll let [Lambert] be the expert on this.” While we have recognized that there is no set litmus test to qualify as an expert, see
Hammond v. International Harvester Co.,
VI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. However, the judgment will be affirmed insofar as it precluded the Brink expert testimony.
Notes
. Jurisdiction was based upon diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
. The parties agree that Pennsylvania substantive law governs this diversity action.
Nowak By and Through Nowak v. Faberge, U.S.A., Inc.,
. Alice Surace claimed loss of consortium.
. In
Lewis,
the Supreme Court acknowledged various approaches to determining whether a product is defectively designed. The court noted that under a "consumer expectations” approach, adopted by the California Supreme Court in
Barker v. Lull Engineering Co.,
. In
Hite v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
.In
Griggs v. BIC Corp.,
On appeal, a panel of this Court relied on the Supreme Court's decision in
Lewis
in affirming the district court on this issue.
Griggs v. BIC Corp.,
. We note that in addition to the Wade factors, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has suggested another set of factors, developed by the California Supreme Court, which may be used in performing the risk-utility analysis:
(1) The gravity of the danger posed by the challenged design; (2) the likelihood that such danger would occur; (3) the mechanical feasibility of a safer design; (4) the financial cost of a safer design; and (5) the adverse consequences to the product that would result from a safer design.
See Dambacher,
. In the district court, Suraee also argued that CMI should have provided the operator an unobstructed view of ground personnel, or added a rear guard, described as a cow catcher. At oral argument, Suraee indicated that he was abandoning the cow catcher design and pursuing the lockout/tagout device as the "main
[but not exclu
sive] thrust" of his argument. However, his brief is devoid of argument with respect to the district court’s disposition under
Azzarello
of the alternative proffered designs, including the need for variable alarms. Accordingly, appellate review of these alternative arguments has been waived.
United States v. Voigt,
.We note that this conclusion is problematic. This is because the risk-utility calculus (or indeed any mode of making the social policy determination required by Azzarello) is a legal determination which should probably not be predicated upon a weighted view of the evidence. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court might want to re *1048 visit this aspect of the matter if and when it definitively comes to grips with the issues we have identified in this opinion.
. In
Hollinger,
a panel of this Court noted that the district court had analyzed the question of summary judgment “under the traditional standard of sufficiency of the evidence to present a jury question," and not as threshold matter under
Azzarello. Hollinger,
. Stephens merely stated, without explanation, that the lockout/tagout device was economically feasible. However, although we conclude that his evidence was marginal with respect to this Wade factor, the totality of the factors relevant here would require the same result.
. In
Dillinger,
after a thorough analysis of Pennsylvania strict liability law, we concluded that the “[Pennsylvania] Supreme Court has unequivocally excluded negligence concepts from product liability cases” and, therefore, the district court had erred in ruling that evidence of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence was admissible to rebut causation.
. We note further that, even assuming arguen-do, that consideration of Surace's conduct had been appropriate under Azzarello, the district court erred in its application of the facts. The district court first suggested that Surace’s use of earplugs was careless. However, SJA required its crew to wear earplugs. Moreover, on appeal, CMI concedes that federal regulations require the use of protective ear gear at the level at which the profiler's alarms sounded (100 db). CMI Br. at 22. Furthermore, although it was undisputed that Surace had turned his back to the machine, it was also clear that the operator moved the machine without being signaled, and that he had never done this in the past. Surace Dep. at 150; Fisher Dep. at 44. Therefore, a reasonable jury could infer that Surace's actions were not careless.
.
See Berkebile,
. CMI also sought summary judgment on the grounds that the profiler had been "substantially changed” and that Surace's conduct was the sole cause of the accident, but these claims are patently lacking in merit.
. For example, Brink described his human factors experience as follows:
Everything was aimed at making it as easy as possible for the person to operate the vehicle as far as locations of instruments and controls, location of steps for entrance and egress ... we tried to design our product that was as manufacturable and maintainable as possible. So to that extent, we always had human factors in our mind____ We never called it human factors, but we were interested in how the product related to the customer or user.
