Cover image for Adaptive Perspectives on Human-Technology Interaction : Methods and Models for Cognitive Engineering and Human-Computer Interaction.
Adaptive Perspectives on Human-Technology Interaction : Methods and Models for Cognitive Engineering and Human-Computer Interaction.
Title:
Adaptive Perspectives on Human-Technology Interaction : Methods and Models for Cognitive Engineering and Human-Computer Interaction.
Author:
Kirlik, Alex.
ISBN:
9780195346770
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (474 pages)
Contents:
Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Foreword -- Contents -- Contributors -- I Background and Motivation -- 1 Cognitive Engineering: Toward a Workable Concept of Mind -- 2 Introduction to Brunswikian Theory and Method -- II Technological Interfaces -- Introduction -- 3 Knowledge versus Execution in Dynamic Judgment Tasks -- 4 Understanding the Effects of Computer Displays and Time Pressure on the Performance of Distributed Teams -- 5 Supporting Situation Assessment through Attention Guidance and Diagnostic Aiding: The Benefits and Costs of Display Enhancement on Judgment Skill -- 6 Applying the Multivariate Lens Model to Fault Diagnosis -- III Automation and Decision Aiding -- Introduction -- 7 Measuring the Fit between Human Judgments and Alerting Systems: A Study of Collision Detection in Aviation -- 8 Trust, Automation, and Feedback: An Integrated Approach -- 9 Human-Automated Judgment Learning: Enhancing Interaction with Automated Judgment Systems -- IV Alternatives to Compensatory Modeling -- Introduction -- 10 Inferring Fast and Frugal Heuristics from Human Judgment Data -- 11 Viewing Training through a Fuzzy Lens -- 12 Achieving Coherence: Meeting New Cognitive Demands in Technological Systems -- V Into the Field: Vicarious Functioning in Action -- Introduction -- 13 What Makes Vicarious Functioning Work? Exploring the Geometry of Human-Technology Interaction -- 14 Understanding the Determinants of Adaptive Behavior in a Modern Airline Cockpit -- 15 Abstracting Situated Action: Implications for Cognitive Modeling and Interface Design -- VI Ecological Analysis Meets Computational Cognitive Modeling -- Introduction -- 16 The Emerging Rapprochement between Cognitive and Ecological Analyses -- 17 The Use of Proximal Information Scent to Forage for Distal Content on the World Wide Web.

18 Kilograms Matter: Rational Analysis, Ecological Rationality, and Closed-Loop Modeling of Interactive Cognition and Behavior -- VII Reflections and Future Directions -- 19 Reflections from a Judgment and Decision Making Perspective -- 20 Reflections from a Cognitive Engineering and Human Factors Perspective -- Name Index -- Subject Index.
Abstract:
How to understand and support cognition in human-technology interaction is both a practically and socially relevant problem. The chapters frame this problem in adaptive terms: how are behaviour and cognition adapted, or perhaps ill-adapted, to the demands and opportunities of an environment where interaction is mediated by tools and technology?.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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