The growth of cognitive modelling in human-computer interaction since GOMS (1990)
| Venue: | Human-Computer Interaction |
| Citations: | 54 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Olson90thegrowth,
author = {Judith Reitman Olson and M. Olson},
title = {The growth of cognitive modelling in human-computer interaction since GOMS},
journal = {Human-Computer Interaction},
year = {1990},
pages = {221265}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to review where we stand with regard to modeling the kind of cognition involved in human-computer interaction. Card, Moran, and Newell's pioneering work on cognitive engineering models and explicit analyses of the knowledge people need to perform a procedure was a significant advance from the kind of modeling cognitive psychology offered at the time. Since then, coordinated bodies of research have both confirmed the basic set of parameters and advanced the number of parameters that account for the time of certain component activities. Formal modeling in grammars and production systems has provided an account for error production in some cases, as well as a basis for calculating how long a system will take to learn and how much savings there is from previous learning. Recently, we were given a new tool for modeling nonsequential component processes, adapting the "critical path analysis " from engineering to the specification of interacting processes and their consequent durations.







