Publication | Closed Access
Toward using alpha and theta brain waves to quantify programmer expertise
31
Citations
11
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
Artificial IntelligenceProgrammer ExpertiseEngineeringTask AnalysisEducational PsychologySoftware EngineeringCognitionPsycholinguisticsIntelligent SystemsProgramming Language TeachingSocial SciencesCognitive TechnologyTheta Brain WavesDirect ObservationCognitive DevelopmentCognitive AnalysisMental EffortCognitive ComputingCognitive ScienceLearning AnalyticsComputer ScienceProgramming Language ComprehensionCognitive PerformanceCognitive EngineeringCognitive System EngineeringProgram ComprehensionHuman-computer InteractionLinguistics
Empirical studies of programming language learnability and usability have thus far depended on indirect measures of human cognitive performance, attempting to capture what is at its essence a purely cognitive exercise through various indicators of comprehension, such as the correctness of coding tasks or the time spent working out the meaning of code and producing acceptable solutions. Understanding program comprehension is essential to understanding the inherent complexity of programming languages, and ultimately, having a measure of mental effort based on direct observation of the brain at work will illuminate the nature of the work of programming. We provide evidence of direct observation of the cognitive effort associated with programming tasks, through a carefully constructed empirical study using a cross-section of undergraduate computer science students and an inexpensive, off-the-shelf brain-computer interface device. This study presents a link between expertise and programming language comprehension, draws conclusions about the observed indicators of cognitive effort using recent cognitive theories, and proposes directions for future work that is now possible.
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