Coping with complexity: the psychology of human behaviour in complex systems
Tasks, errors, and mental models
Alan Turing
Human-Centered Computing: Thinking In and Out of the Box
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Turing test considered harmful
IJCAI'95 Proceedings of the 14th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 1
A Rose by Any Other Name...Would Probably Be Given an Acronym
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Designing Human-Centered Distributed Information Systems
IEEE Intelligent Systems
From Contextual Inquiry to Designable Futures: What Do We Need to Get There?
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Proceedings of the third Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction
Toward a Theory of Complex and Cognitive Systems
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Agent coordination and communication in sociotechnological systems: Design and measurement issues
Interacting with Computers
Using socially deliberating agents in organized settings
ESAW'05 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Engineering Societies in the Agents World
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A fundamental stance taken in human-centered computing is that information-processing devices must be thought of in systems terms. At first blush, this seems self-evident. However, the notion has a long history, and not just in systems engineering.