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Designing Interaction
Psychology at the Human-Computer Interface
Taschenbuch von J. Long
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
Designing Interaction, first published in 1991, presents a broadbased and fundamental re-examination of human-computer interaction as a practical and scientific endeavor.
Designing Interaction, first published in 1991, presents a broadbased and fundamental re-examination of human-computer interaction as a practical and scientific endeavor.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface; Contributors; 1. Introduction: The Kittle House Manifesto John M. Carroll; 2. Cognitive artifacts Donald A. Norman; 3. Some remarks on the theory-practice gap Zenon W. Pylyshyn; 4. Comparative task analysis: an alternative direction for human-computer interaction science Ruven Brooks; 5. Let's get real: a position paper on the role of cognitive psychology in the design of humanly useful and usable systems Thomas K. Landauer; 6. The task-artifact cycle John M. Carroll, Wendy A. Kellogg and Mary Beth Rosson; 7. Bridging between basic theories and the artifacts of human-computer interaction Philip Barnard; 8. Interface problems and interface resources Stephen J. Payne; 9. Inner and outer theory in human-computer interaction Clayton Lewis; 10. Local sciences: viewing the design of human-computer systems as cognitive science Andrea A. diSessa; 11. The role of German work psychology in the design of artifacts Siegfried Greif; 12. Beyond the interface: encountering artifacts in use Liam J. Bannon and Susanne Bødker; 13. A development perspective on interface, design and theory Austin Henderson; 14. Working with the design process: supporting effective and efficient design John Karat and John L. Bennett; 15. Discussion: perspectives on methodology in HCI research and practice Linda Tetzlaff and Robert L. Mack; Index.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface; Contributors; 1. Introduction: The Kittle House Manifesto John M. Carroll; 2. Cognitive artifacts Donald A. Norman; 3. Some remarks on the theory-practice gap Zenon W. Pylyshyn; 4. Comparative task analysis: an alternative direction for human-computer interaction science Ruven Brooks; 5. Let's get real: a position paper on the role of cognitive psychology in the design of humanly useful and usable systems Thomas K. Landauer; 6. The task-artifact cycle John M. Carroll, Wendy A. Kellogg and Mary Beth Rosson; 7. Bridging between basic theories and the artifacts of human-computer interaction Philip Barnard; 8. Interface problems and interface resources Stephen J. Payne; 9. Inner and outer theory in human-computer interaction Clayton Lewis; 10. Local sciences: viewing the design of human-computer systems as cognitive science Andrea A. diSessa; 11. The role of German work psychology in the design of artifacts Siegfried Greif; 12. Beyond the interface: encountering artifacts in use Liam J. Bannon and Susanne Bødker; 13. A development perspective on interface, design and theory Austin Henderson; 14. Working with the design process: supporting effective and efficient design John Karat and John L. Bennett; 15. Discussion: perspectives on methodology in HCI research and practice Linda Tetzlaff and Robert L. Mack; Index.
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