Publication | Closed Access
ACT-R: A Theory of Higher Level Cognition and Its Relation to Visual Attention
557
Citations
26
References
1997
Year
CognitionHuman Performance ModelingAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyHigher Level CognitionEarly VisionVisual CognitionHigher LevelCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesVisual AttentionAction PatternPerceptual User InterfaceVisual ProcessingExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopVisual FunctionAction MonitoringEye TrackingHuman-computer InteractionAct-r System
Abstract The ACT-R system is a general system for modeling a wide range of higher level cognitive processes. Recently, it has been embellished with a theory of how its higher level processes interact with a visual interface. This includes a theory of how visual attention can move across the screen, encoding information into a form that can be processed by ACT-R. This system is applied to modeling several classic phenomena in the literature that depend on the speed and selectivity with which visual attention can move across a visual display. ACT-R is capable of interacting with the same computer screens that subjects do and, as such, is well suited to provide a model for tasks involving human-computer interaction. In this article, we discuss a demonstration of ACT-R's application to menu selection and show that the ACT-R theory makes unique predictions, without estimating any parameters, about the time to search a menu. These predictions are confirmed.
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