CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public- 20 years of speakers
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February 4, 1994
Making sense of complexity is a common activity. People must continually make sense of devices, interfaces, and large amounts of information. Sensemaking is the process of searching for a representation and encoding data in that representation to answer task-specific questions. Different operations during sensemaking require differing cognitive and external resources. Representations are chosen and changed to reduce the cost of operations in a sensemaking task. The power of these representational shifts and their effect on resource use is generally under-appreciated. Subtle changes in the costs of sensemaking steps can have a profound effect on one's ability to make sense of the world. And, somewhat surprisingly, sensemaking appears to follow a fairly consistent patterns across different people, situations, domains, tools and methods. Working from observations of people using computer systems to make sense of complex information sets, we develop a model of sensemaking and its cost structure. This lays the groundwork for a deeper understanding of the opportunities for supporting sensemaking with computers. [ This research is joint work with Mark Stefik, Peter Pirolli and Stu Card of Xerox PARC. ] |
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