1st Edition

Interpreting Remote Sensing Imagery Human Factors

Edited By Robert R. Hoffman, Arthur B. Markman Copyright 2001
    320 Pages
    by CRC Press

    320 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

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    No matter how advanced the technology, there is always the human factor involved - the power behind the technology. Interpreting Remote Sensing Imagery: Human Factors draws together leading psychologists, remote sensing scientists, and government and industry scientists to consider the factors involved in expertise and perceptual skill.
    This book covers the cognitive issues of learning, perception, and expertise, the applied issues of display design, interface design, software design, and mental workload issues, and the practitioner's issues of workstation design, human performance, and training. It tackles the intangibles of data interpretation, based on information from experts who do the job. You will learn:
    Information and perception
    What do experts perceive in remote sensing and cartographic displays?
    Reasoning and perception
    How do experts "see through" the data display to understand its meaning and significance?
    Human-computer interaction
    How do experts work with their displays and what happens when the "fiddle" with them?
    Learning and training
    What are the milestones in training development from novice to expert image interpreter?
    Interpreting Remote Sensing Imagery: Human Factors breaks down the mystery of what experts do when they interpret data, how they learn, and what individual factors speed or impede training. Even more importantly, it gives you the tools to train efficiently and understand how the human factor impacts data interpretation.

    Introduction. The Communication of Topographic Perspectives and Forms. Seeing the Invisible. Seeing the Dynamics.

    Biography

    Hoffman, Robert R.; Markman, Arthur B.