| A. Andre and A. Degani, Do You Know What Mode You're In? An Analysis Of Mode Error In Everyday Things, in Human-Automation Interaction, M. Moulaua and J. Koonce, Editors. New Jersey. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 19-28. |
....basis of testing. Also, given any nondeterministic system testing cannot be exhaustive by its definition. Generating a useful collection of finite tests is thus an important practical problem that the specifier is currently expected to solve manually . 5. Example This example is adapted from Andre and Degani (1997) who discuss the notion of modes in interactive systems. The example concerns a remote control that can operate three systems: the TV, the VCR and a CD player. For the sake of the example, let the LTS to the left represent the task model of operating the system and the one to the right the device ....
Andre, A. & Degani, A. (1997) Do you know what mode you're in? An anlysis of mode error in everyday things. In M.Mouloua & Koonce, J.M., (Eds.) Human-automation interaction: Research & Practice, Mahwah, NJ:Lawrence Erlbaum, pp.19-28.
....technique can be chosen or developed. However, before interaction techniques can be defined, consideration of their context of use, or mode, is required. 3. Interaction Modes Modes are implemented, in one way or another, in almost any modern machine or piece of equipment [7] Andre and Degani [8] comment that modes represent the different behaviours, or functions, of a given system. Many interaction techniques in VEs are mode oriented. For example, VEs are sensitive to whether the user is navigating, selecting objects or manipulating objects. System behaviour defines what the user ....
....interaction with complex systems is a non 6 trivial problem and it appears that mode confusion is a significant contributor to mishaps in many domains. System mode is also relevant when trying to define the usability of a system. The user should be able to tell what mode they are currently in [8]. Mine, Brooks and Sequin [10] note that constantly switching between object interaction and movement control breaks the natural rhythm of the operation and adds significant cognitive overhead. Although there are a variety of different interaction techniques, many can be grouped loosely into the ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
A. Andre and A. Degani. Do You Know What Mode You're In? An Analysis Of Mode Error In Everyday Things. In M. Moulaua and J. Koonce, editors, HumanAutomation Interaction, pp. 19-28. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates: New Jersey, 1997.
....technique can be chosen or developed. However, before interaction techniques can be defined, consideration of their context of use, or mode, is required. 3. Interaction Modes Modes are implemented, in one way or another, in almost any modern machine or piece of equipment [7] Andre and Degani [8] comment that modes represent the different behaviours, or functions, of a given system. Many interaction techniques in VEs are mode oriented, e.g. whether the user is navigating, selecting objects or manipulating objects. System behaviour defines what the user perceives of the environment and how ....
....human interaction with complex systems is a non trivial problem and it appears that mode confusion is a significant contributor to mishaps in many domains. System mode is also relevant when trying to define the usability of a system. The user should be able to tell what mode they are currently in [8]. Mine, Brooks and Sequin [10] note that constantly switching between object interaction and movement control breaks the natural rhythm of the operation and adds significant cognitive overhead. Although there are a variety of different interaction techniques, many can be grouped loosely into the ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Andre, A. and A. Degani. Do You Know What Mode You're In? An Analysis Of Mode Error In Everyday Things. in 2nd Conference on Automation Technology and Human Performance. 1996. Daytona Beach, FL, USA: University of Central Florida.
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A. Andre and A. Degani, Do You Know What Mode You're In? An Analysis Of Mode Error In Everyday Things, in Human-Automation Interaction, M. Moulaua and J. Koonce, Editors. New Jersey. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 19-28.
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