Cognitive Architecture (2003)
| Venue: | In |
| Citations: | 14 - 4 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Byrne03cognitivearchitecture,
author = {Michael D. Byrne},
title = {Cognitive Architecture},
booktitle = {In},
year = {2003},
pages = {97--117},
publisher = {Erlbaum}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Introduction Integrating theory, data, and knowledge about cognitive psychology and human performance in a way that is useful for guiding design in HCI is still not a simple matter. However, there have been significant advances since Card, Moran, and Newell wrote the above passage. One of the key advances is the development of cognitive architecture, the subject of this chapter. The chapter will first consider the what it is to be cognitive architecture and why cognitive architecture is relevant for HCI. In order to detail the present state of cognitive architectures in HCI, it is important to consider some of the past use of cognitive architectures in HCI research. Then, four architectures actively in use in the research community (LICAI/CoLiDeS, Soar, EPIC, and ACT-R/ PM) and their application to HCI will be examined. The chapter will conclude with a discussion of the future of cognitive architectures in HCI. 1.1 What Are Cognitive Architectures? Most any di







