Publication | Closed Access
Ecological interface design: theoretical foundations
1.1K
Citations
66
References
1992
Year
Ecological EngineeringEngineeringComplex SystemsCognitionEid InterfaceIntelligent SystemsEnvironmental PlanningCognitive InteractionSocial-ecological SystemSocial SciencesSustainable DesignCognitive TechnologyCognitive ArchitectureHigher LevelSystems EngineeringHuman LearningCognitive ScienceMachine SystemsDesignCognitive DynamicsCognitive EngineeringCognitive System EngineeringAutomationHuman-computer InteractionEcological Interface Design
A theoretical framework for designing interfaces for complex human-machine systems is proposed. The framework, called ecological interface design (EID), is based on the skills, rules, and knowledge taxonomy of cognitive control. The basic goals of EID are not to force processing to a higher level than the demands of the task require, and to support each of the three levels of cognitive control. Thus, an EID interface should not contribute to the difficulty of the task, and at the same time, it should support the entire range of activities that operators will be faced with. Three prescriptive design principles are suggested to achieve this objective, each directed at supporting a particular level of cognitive control. Particular attention is paid to presenting a coherent deductive argument justifying the principles of EID. Support for the EID framework is discussed. Some issues for future research are outlined.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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