<P>Hailed on first publication as a compendium of foundational principles and cutting-edge research, <EM>The Human-Computer Interaction Handbook</EM> has become the gold standard reference in this field. Derived from select chapters of this groundbreaking and authoritative resource, <STRONG>Human-Co
Fundamentals of HumanβComputer Interaction
β Scribed by Andrew Monk
- Publisher
- Elsevier Inc, Academic Press
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 287
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Content:
Computers and People Series, Page ii
Front Matter, Page iii
Copyright, Page iv
CONTRIBUTORS, Page xiii, Peter Bailey, Phil Barnard, Nick Hammond, Charles Hulme, Alison Kidd, G. Reinhard Kofer, Antony Lo, Andrew Monk, Peter Reid, Harold Thimbleby, Peter Thompson, Neil Thomson, John Waterworth
PREFACE, Page xv
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS, Page xvii
INTRODUCTION TO THE USER AS A PROCESSOR OF INFORMATION, Pages 1,3
CHAPTER 1 - Visual Perception: an Intelligent System with Limited Bandwidth, Pages 5-33, Peter Thompson
CHAPTER 2 - Reading: Extracting Information from Printed and Electronically Presented Text, Pages 35-47, Charles Hulme
CHAPTER 3 - Human Memory: Different Stores with Different Characteristics, Pages 49-56, Neil Thomson
CHAPTER 4 - Thinking and Reasoning: Why is Logic So Difficult?, Pages 57-63, Neil Thomson
INTRODUCTION TO THE USE OF BEHAVIOURAL DATA, Pages 65,67
CHAPTER 5 - How and When to Collect Behavioural Data, Pages 69-79, Andrew Monk
CHAPTER 6 - Statistical Evaluation of Behavioural Data, Pages 81-87, Andrew Monk
CHAPTER 7 - Example of an Experiment: Evaluating Some Speech Synthesisers for Public Announcements, Pages 89-102, John Waterworth, Antony Lo
INTRODUCTION TO THE USER INFERFACE, Pages 103,105-106
CHAPTER 8 - Work Station Design, Activities and Display Techniques, Pages 107-126, Pete Reid
CHAPTER 9 - Dialogue Design: Characteristics of User Knowledge, Pages 127-164, Nick Hammond, Philip Barnard
CHAPTER 10 - User Interface Design: Generative User Engineering Principles, Pages 165-180, Harold Thimbleby
CHAPTER 11 - Future Uses of Future Offices, Pages 181-192, G. Reinhard Kofer
CHAPTER 12 - Speech Communication: The Problem and Some Solutions, Pages 193-220, Peter Bailey
CHAPTER 13 - Speech Communication: How to Use It, Pages 221-236, John Waterworth
CHAPTER 14 - Human Factors Problems in the Design and Use of Expert Systems, Pages 237-247, Alison Kidd
GLOSSARY, Pages 249-254
REFERENCES, Pages 255-271
Author Index, Pages 273-276
Subject Index, Pages 277-293
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Introduction What HCI Is and Why It Is Important Principles of HCIβ β β β ""Know Thy User""β β β β β Understand the Taskβ β β β β Reduce Memory Loadβ β β β β Strive for Consistencyβ β β β β Remind Users and Refresh Their Memoryβ β β β β Prevent Errors/Reversal of Actionβ β β β β Naturalness SummaryR
Hailed on first publication as a compendium of foundational principles and cutting-edge research, The Human-Computer Interaction Handbook has become the gold standard reference in this field. Derived from select chapters of this groundbreaking and authoritative resource, Human-Computer Interaction F
<p><P>A brain-computer interface (BCI) establishes a direct output channel between the human brain and external devices. BCIs infer user intent via direct measures of brain activity and thus enable communication and control without movement. This book, authored by experts in the field, provides an a