Interaction and resistance: The recognition of intentions in new human-computer interaction

Müller VC (2011)


Publication Type: Conference contribution

Publication year: 2011

Journal

Book Volume: 6456 LNCS

Pages Range: 1-7

Conference Proceedings Title: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)

Event location: ITA

ISBN: 9783642181832

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-18184-9_1

Abstract

Just as AI has moved away from classical AI, human-computer interaction (HCI) must move away from what I call 'good old fashioned HCI' to 'new HCI' - it must become a part of cognitive systems research where HCI is one case of the interaction of intelligent agents (we now know that interaction is essential for intelligent agents anyway). For such interaction, we cannot just 'analyze the data', but we must assume intentions in the other, and I suggest these are largely recognized through resistance to carrying out one's own intentions. This does not require fully cognitive agents but can start at a very basic level. New HCI integrates into cognitive systems research and designs intentional systems that provide resistance to the human agent. © 2011 Springer.

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How to cite

APA:

Müller, V.C. (2011). Interaction and resistance: The recognition of intentions in new human-computer interaction. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (pp. 1-7). ITA.

MLA:

Müller, Vincent C.. "Interaction and resistance: The recognition of intentions in new human-computer interaction." Proceedings of the 3rd COST 2102 International Training School on Toward Autonomous, Adaptive, and Context-Aware Multimodal Interfaces: Theoretical and Practical Issues, ITA 2011. 1-7.

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