Table of contents for Adaptive perspectives on human-technology interaction : methods and models for cognitive engineering and human-computer interaction / edited by Alex Kirlik.

Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog.

Note: Contents data are machine generated based on pre-publication provided by the publisher. Contents may have variations from the printed book or be incomplete or contain other coding.


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Adaptive Perspectives on Human-Technology Interaction
Alex Kirlik (Ed.) New York: Oxford University Press
A Volume in the Human-Technology Interaction Series (A. Kirlik, Series Editor)
Front Matter	(Oxford University Press)
Foreword 	(K. R. Hammond)
Contents	(This document)
Contributors	(List with Affiliations)
Part I		Background and Motivation 
Chapter 1.	Cognitive engineering: Toward a workable concept of mind (Kirlik)
Chapter 2. 	Introduction to Brunswikian theory and method (Goldstein)
Part II		Technological Interfaces
Part II Introduction (Kirlik)
Chapter 3	Knowledge versus execution in dynamic judgment tasks (Bisantz, Kirlik, Gay, Walker &
Fisk)
Chapter 4	The effects of computer displays and time pressure on the performance of distributed
teams (Adelman, Yeo & Miller)
Chapter 5	Supporting situation assessment through attention guidance and diagnostic aiding: The
benefits and costs of display enhancement on judgment skill (Horrey, Wickens, Kirlik
& Stewart)
Chapter 6	Applying the multivariate lens model to fault diagnosis (Jha & Bisantz)
Part III	Alerting Automation and Decision Aids
		Part III Introduction (Kirlik)
Chapter 7	Measuring the fit between human judgment and alerting systems: A study of collision
detection in aviation (Pritchett & Bisantz)
Chapter 8	Trust, decision aiding, and feedback: An integrated approach. (Seong, Bisantz & Gattie)
Chapter 9	Human-automated judgment learning: Enhancing interaction with automated judgment
systems (Bass & Pritchett)
Part IV		Alternatives to Compensatory Modeling
		Part IV Introduction (Kirlik)
Chapter 10	Inferring fast and frugal heuristics from human judgment data
(Rothrock & Kirlik)
Chapter 11	Viewing training through a fuzzy lens (Campbell, Buff & Bolton)
Chapter 12	Achieving coherence: Meeting new cognitive demands in technological systems
(Mosier & McCauley)
Part V		Into the Field: Vicarious Functioning in Action
		Part V Introduction (Kirlik)
Chapter 13	What makes vicarious functioning work? Exploring the geometry of human-technology
interaction (Degani, Shafto & Kirlik)
Chapter 14	Understanding the determinants of adaptive behavior in a modern airline cockpit (Casner)
Chapter 15	Abstracting situated action: Implications for cognitive modeling and interface design
(Kirlik)
Part VI		Ecological Analysis Meets Cognitive Modeling
		Part VI Introduction (Kirlik)
Chapter 16	The emerging rapprochement between cognitive and ecological analyses (Gray)
Chapter 17	The use of proximal information scent to forage for distal content on the World Wide
Web (Pirolli)
Chapter 18	Kilograms matter: Rational analysis, ecological rationality, and closed-loop modeling of
interactive cognition and behavior (Byrne, Kirlik & Fick)
Part VII	Reflections and Future Directions
Chapter 19	Reflections from a judgment & decision making perspective (Connolly)
Chapter 20	Reflections from a cognitive engineering & human factors perspective (Vicente)
Author Index 
Subject Index
Back Matter

Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:

Human-computer interaction.
Human-machine systems.