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Augmented cognition

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Augmented cognition is an interdisciplinary area of psychology and engineering, attracting researchers from the more traditional fields of human-computer interaction, psychology, ergonomics and neuroscience.[1][2] Augmented cognition research generally focuses on tasks and environments where human-computer interaction and interfaces already exist. Research in this domain seeks to increase understanding and create new methodologies for enhancing those interactions by incorporating findings and tools from the field of neuroscience.[1][2] Such research seeks to develop applications which capture the human user's cognitive state in order to drive real-time computer systems. In doing so, these systems are able to provide operational data specifically targeted for the user in a given context.[3] Three major areas of research in the field are: Cognitive State Assessment (CSA), Mitigation Strategies (MS), and Robust Controllers (RC).[4]

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) had an AugCog research program from 2001 - 2004.[1][2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Miller, Christopher A.; Dorneich, Michael C. (2006). "From Associate Systems to Augmented Cognition: 25 Years of User Adaptation in High Criticality Systems". Foundations of Augmented Cognition. 2: 344–353.
  2. ^ a b c Stanney, Kay M.; Schmorrow, Dylan D.; Johnston, Mathew; Fuchs, Sven; Jones, David; Hale, Kelly S.; Ahmad, Ali; Young, Peter (2009). "Augmented cognition: An overview". Reviews of human factors and ergonomics. 5 (1): 195–224. doi:10.1518/155723409X448062.
  3. ^ D. Schmorrow and A. Kruse, “DARPA’s Augmented Cognition Program-tomorrow’s human computer interaction from vision to
    reality: building cognitively aware computational systems,” Human Factors and Power Plants, . . . , pp. 1–4, 2002. [Online]. Available: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/absall.jsp?arnumber=1042859
  4. ^ Reeves, Leah M.; Schmorrow, Dylan D.; Stanney, Kay M. (2007). Schmorrow, Dylan D. (ed.). "Augmented Cognition and Cognitive State Assessment Technology – Near-Term, Mid-Term, and Long-Term Research Objectives". Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg: 220–228. ISBN 978-3-540-73215-0. Retrieved 2015-04-18. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading

  • Dylan Schmorrow, Ivy V. Estabrooke, Marc Grootjen: Foundations of Augmented Cognition. Neuroergonomics and Operational Neuroscience, 5th International Conference, FAC 2009 Held as Part of HCI International 2009 San Diego, CA, USA, July 19–24, 2009, Proceedings Springer 2009.
  • Fuchs, Sven, Hale, Kelly S., Axelsson, Par, "Augmented Cognition can increase human performance in the control room," Human Factors and Power Plants and HPRCT 13th Annual Meeting, 2007 IEEE 8th, vol., no., pp. 128–132, 26-31 Aug. 2007