R. Proctor, and K. Vu. The Human Computer Interaction Handbook, chapter 2, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 3 edition, (2012)
DOI: 10.1201/b11963-4
Abstract
The methods, theories, and models in human information processing are currently well developed. The knowledge in this area, of which we are only able to describe at a surface level in this chapter, is relevant to a wide range of concerns in HCI, from visual display design to representation and communication of knowledge. For HCI to be effective, the interaction must be made compatible with the human information-processing capabilities. Cognitive architectures that incorporate many of the facts about human information processing have been developed that can be applied to HCI.
%0 Book Section
%1 ProctorVu12c2
%A Proctor, Robert W.
%A Vu, Kim-Phuong L.
%B The Human Computer Interaction Handbook
%C Boca Raton, FL
%D 2012
%E Jacko, Julie A.
%I CRC Press
%K 01624 paper ai user interaction interface information processing cognitive science zzz.hci
%P 21--40
%R 10.1201/b11963-4
%T Human Information Processing
%X The methods, theories, and models in human information processing are currently well developed. The knowledge in this area, of which we are only able to describe at a surface level in this chapter, is relevant to a wide range of concerns in HCI, from visual display design to representation and communication of knowledge. For HCI to be effective, the interaction must be made compatible with the human information-processing capabilities. Cognitive architectures that incorporate many of the facts about human information processing have been developed that can be applied to HCI.
%7 3
%& 2
@incollection{ProctorVu12c2,
abstract = {The methods, theories, and models in human information processing are currently well developed. The knowledge in this area, of which we are only able to describe at a surface level in this chapter, is relevant to a wide range of concerns in HCI, from visual display design to representation and communication of knowledge. For HCI to be effective, the interaction must be made compatible with the human information-processing capabilities. Cognitive architectures that incorporate many of the facts about human information processing have been developed that can be applied to HCI.},
added-at = {2016-12-30T23:35:07.000+0100},
address = {Boca Raton, FL},
author = {Proctor, Robert W. and Vu, Kim-Phuong L.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/270059f96a246635e2bd4d052d68c9e45/flint63},
booktitle = {The Human Computer Interaction Handbook},
chapter = 2,
crossref = {Jacko2012},
doi = {10.1201/b11963-4},
edition = 3,
editor = {Jacko, Julie A.},
file = {Electronic version:2012/ProctorVu12c2.pdf:PDF},
groups = {public},
interhash = {bf9a033f08aa3b403320850be9fe7e2c},
intrahash = {70059f96a246635e2bd4d052d68c9e45},
keywords = {01624 paper ai user interaction interface information processing cognitive science zzz.hci},
pages = {21--40},
publisher = {CRC Press},
timestamp = {2017-07-13T17:21:25.000+0200},
title = {Human Information Processing},
username = {flint63},
year = 2012
}