How do people interact with computers? This fundamental question was asked by Card, Moran, and Newell in 1983 with a proposition to frame it as a question about human cognition – in other words, as a matter of how information is processed in the mind. Recently, the question has been reframed as one of adaptation: how do people adapt their interaction to the limits imposed by cognition, device design, and environment? The paper synthesizes advances toward an answer within the theoretical framework of computational rationality. The core assumption is that users act in accordance with what is best for them, given the limits imposed by their cognitive architecture and their experience of the task environment. This theory can be expressed in com...
Recently, the technologies deriving from artificial intelligence and theories of self-organising ada...
The idea of human-computer interaction was born as computer technology progressed. The youthful age ...
The rapidly increasing pervasiveness and integration of computers in human society calls for a broad...
Funding Information: This work was funded by the Finnish Center for AI and Academy of Finland (“BAD”...
This chapter introduces the field of computational interaction, and explains its long tradition of r...
This book presents computational interaction as an approach to explaining and enhancing the interact...
Two important phenomena in human - computer interaction (HCI) are considered: the reliance on extern...
Despite different computerised approaches have been hardwired to solve various complex practical pro...
\u3cp\u3eJust as AI has moved away from classical AI, human-computer interaction (HCI) must move awa...
As computer technologies become more pervasive new challengers will emerge, requiring approaches tha...
Abstract This chapter explores the relationship between human computation and human-computer interac...
We propose a framework for including information-processing bounds in rational analyses. It is an ap...
This paper blends work in extended mind, distributed cognition, and predictive processing to provide...
In this theoretical paper, there will be offered a short introduction to the various discussions aro...
This book explores the role of cognition in the field of human-computer interaction (HCI) assessing ...
Recently, the technologies deriving from artificial intelligence and theories of self-organising ada...
The idea of human-computer interaction was born as computer technology progressed. The youthful age ...
The rapidly increasing pervasiveness and integration of computers in human society calls for a broad...
Funding Information: This work was funded by the Finnish Center for AI and Academy of Finland (“BAD”...
This chapter introduces the field of computational interaction, and explains its long tradition of r...
This book presents computational interaction as an approach to explaining and enhancing the interact...
Two important phenomena in human - computer interaction (HCI) are considered: the reliance on extern...
Despite different computerised approaches have been hardwired to solve various complex practical pro...
\u3cp\u3eJust as AI has moved away from classical AI, human-computer interaction (HCI) must move awa...
As computer technologies become more pervasive new challengers will emerge, requiring approaches tha...
Abstract This chapter explores the relationship between human computation and human-computer interac...
We propose a framework for including information-processing bounds in rational analyses. It is an ap...
This paper blends work in extended mind, distributed cognition, and predictive processing to provide...
In this theoretical paper, there will be offered a short introduction to the various discussions aro...
This book explores the role of cognition in the field of human-computer interaction (HCI) assessing ...
Recently, the technologies deriving from artificial intelligence and theories of self-organising ada...
The idea of human-computer interaction was born as computer technology progressed. The youthful age ...
The rapidly increasing pervasiveness and integration of computers in human society calls for a broad...