Foundations of Human-Computer Interaction: Designing for Cognitive Alignment - Brossura

Atkinson PhD, Robert

 
9780443413599: Foundations of Human-Computer Interaction: Designing for Cognitive Alignment

Sinossi

Foundations of Human-Computer Interaction: Designing for Cognitive Alignment reframes human-computer interaction (HCI), usability, and user-centered design by focusing on the conditions under which cognition stabilizes over time. It provides an integrated account of HCI by bringing together cognitive science, neuroscience, and design principles to explain how systems shape perception, regulate attention, and support stable reasoning across repeated encounters. This approach ensures that graduate and undergraduate students not only understand core theoretical frameworks but also recognize how design decisions influence reasoning, decision-making, and cognitive effort in real-world contexts. The book emphasizes structured learning and iterative design processes, making the material accessible to both novices and advanced learners. It also addresses contemporary challenges such as AI-driven systems, adaptive interfaces, and large-scale personalization, offering a framework for understanding how misalignment emerges as instability―seen in repetition, delayed decisions, fragmented attention, and unresolved effort―and how design can support clarity, recovery, and trust in responsible ways

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Informazioni sull?autore

Dr Robert Atkinson is the Associate Professor of Computer Science in the School of Computing and Augmented Intelligence at Arizona State University, with a background in cognitive science, psychology, and neuroscience. His work focuses on the intersection of these fields with technology. He holds a PhD in Cognitive Science from the University of Wisconsin, and has published over 60 academic papers in peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings across diverse fields, including computer science, psychology, data science, educational technology, human systems engineering, and informatics.

Dalla quarta di copertina

Foundations of Human-Computer Interaction: Designing for Cognitive Alignment reframes human-computer interaction (HCI), usability, and user-centered design by focusing on the conditions under which cognition stabilizes over time. It provides an integrated account of HCI by bringing together cognitive science, neuroscience, and design principles to explain how systems shape perception, regulate attention, and support stable reasoning across repeated encounters. This approach ensures that graduate and undergraduate students not only understand core theoretical frameworks but also recognize how design decisions influence reasoning, decision-making, and cognitive effort in real-world contexts. The book emphasizes structured learning and iterative design processes, making the material accessible to both novices and advanced learners. It also addresses contemporary challenges such as AI-driven systems, adaptive interfaces, and large-scale personalization, offering a framework for understanding how misalignment emerges as instability―seen in repetition, delayed decisions, fragmented attention, and unresolved effort―and how design can support clarity, recovery, and trust in responsible ways.

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