Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

October 5, 2012

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied

Filed under: Interface Research/Design,Language,Psychology — Patrick Durusau @ 2:16 pm

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied

From the website:

The mission of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied® is to publish original empirical investigations in experimental psychology that bridge practically oriented problems and psychological theory.

The journal also publishes research aimed at developing and testing of models of cognitive processing or behavior in applied situations, including laboratory and field settings. Occasionally, review articles are considered for publication if they contribute significantly to important topics within applied experimental psychology.

Areas of interest include applications of perception, attention, memory, decision making, reasoning, information processing, problem solving, learning, and skill acquisition. Settings may be industrial (such as human–computer interface design), academic (such as intelligent computer-aided instruction), forensic (such as eyewitness memory), or consumer oriented (such as product instructions).

I browsed several recent issues of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied while researching the Todd Rogers post. Fascinating stuff and some of it will find its way into interfaces or other more “practical” aspects of computer science.

Something to temper the focus on computer facing work.

No computer has ever originated a purchase order or contract. Might not hurt to know something about the entities that do.

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