To evaluate a claimant’s work as generally performed in the national economy, locate
            the occupational counterpart for the claimant’s job in the Dictionary of Occupational
            Titles (DOT).
         
         If there is no occupational counterpart in the DOT, you cannot evaluate past relevant
            (PRW) as generally performed in the national economy unless you have evidence from
            other reliable occupational information that provides this. For more information,
            see SSR
            24-3p.
         
         
            
               NOTE: When evaluating PRW the claimant performed in the military, do not use a “civilian”
                  counterpart to a military job to conclude that the claimant could perform their past
                  relevant work “as generally performed in the national economy.” If the military occupation
                  is not defined in the DOT, the step 4 determination for these cases is an analysis
                  of the claimant’s ability to perform their military occupation as they performed the
                  job. The DOT does not provide information about the physical and mental demands of
                  all military occupations, so we are not always able to evaluate military occupations
                  as generally performed in the national economy unless we have evidence from other
                  reliable occupational information that provides this. Therefore, if the claimant’s
                  military occupation is not in the DOT and if the claimant is unable to perform their
                  military PRW as they describe it, proceed to step 5. At step 5 of sequential evaluation,
                  a claimant may be able to use skills they gained from skilled or semiskilled military
                  PRW to adjust to other work.