ADAPT: A Predictive Cognitive Model of User Visual Attention and Action Planning
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
Monitoring Behavior and Supervisory Control
Monitoring Behavior and Supervisory Control
The Ecological Expert: Acting to Create Information to Guide Action
HICS '98 Proceedings of the Fourth Symposium on Human Interaction with Complex Systems
Humans and Automation: System Design and Research Issues
Humans and Automation: System Design and Research Issues
Adaptive Perspectives on Human-Technology Interaction: Methods and Models for Cognitive Engineering and Human-Computer Interaction (Human-Technology Interaction)
Towards a Computational Model of Perception and Action in Human Computer Interaction
ICDHM '09 Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Digital Human Modeling: Held as Part of HCI International 2009
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A recent trend in cognitive modeling is to couple cognitive architectures with computer models or simulations of dynamic environments, such as flight simulators, to study interactive behavior and embedded cognition. Progress in this area is made difficult by the fact that cognitive architectures traditionally have been motivated by data from discrete experimental trials using static, non-interactive tasks. As a result, additional theoretical problems must be addressed to bring cognitive architectures to bear on the study of cognition in dynamic and interactive environments. I identify and discuss three such problems dealing with the need to model the sensitivity of behavior to environmental constraints, the need to model context-specific adaptations underlying expertise, and the need for environmental modeling at a functional level. These issues do not arise merely out of the needs of "applied" science, but instead signal gaps in the fundamental scientific understanding of cognition and behavior in dynamic, interactive contexts.