1st Edition

Electronic Performance Support Using Digital Technology to Enhance Human Ability

By Paul van Schaik, Philip Barker Copyright 2010
    326 Pages
    by Routledge

    326 Pages
    by Routledge

    Despite ubiquitous powerful technologies such as networked computers, global positioning systems, and cell phones; human failures in decision-making and performance continue to have disastrous consequences. Electronic Performance Support: Using Digital Technology to Enhance Human Ability, reminds everyone involved in education, training, human performance engineering, and related fields of the enormous importance of this area. Ironically, the more complex technology becomes, the more performance support may be needed, and that's why the extraordinary expertise shared in this book is especially valuable. The authors emphasize the psychological aspects of performance support, the fundamental limitations of human memory, perception, cognition, conation, and psychomotor skills and how they can be reduced through electronic performance support, as one of the most important pursuits of this century. Readers will find the material presented extremely useful because of its generic basis - which underlines much of the contemporary use of electronic technology for supporting people who are engaged in problem-solving activities. At the same time, the book gives examples of the application of electronic performance support in a number of specific domains. Possible future developments for electronic performance support are also discussed. The technological challenges we face today, both globally and locally, are more urgent than most people seem willing to acknowledge, and there is no time to waste putting the ideas expressed in this book into action.

    Contents: Foreword; Prelude; Part I Foundations: Introduction, Philip Barker; Psychological perspective, Paul van Schaik; Technology perspective, Philip Barker; Learning, instruction, practice and expert behaviour, Philip Barker. Part II Applications: Enhancing educational opportunities using electronic performance support tools, Philip Barker; Information access, Oladeji Famakinwa and Philip Barker; Human communication, Nigel Beacham; Disability, Steve Green and Elaine Pearson; Medical applications, Jean Roberts; Science and engineering, Ashok Banerji; Business and commerce, Barry Ip; EPSS applications in a corporate setting, Eran Gal and Paul van Shaik; Supporting expert work processes, Christopher G. Jennings, Arthur E. Kirkpatrick and Peyvand Mohseni; Schooltrack: an EPSS for Action Research, Sjoerd de Vries, Paul van Schaik and Dick Slettenhaar. Part III Concluding Remarks: Conclusion, Philip Barker and Paul van Schaik; Future directions for EPSS, The Contributors; Index.

    Biography

    Philip Barker is the Eyetech Professor of Applied Computing within the School of Computing at Teesside University in the UK. He has published numerous books, research papers and conference publications. He was appointed as a National Teaching Fellow by the UK's Higher Education Academy in 2005 for his outstanding contributions to the development of electronic learning. He has travelled the world giving lectures, workshops and keynote presentations on his research specialisms. These fall broadly into the general area of human-computer interaction and include performance support, digital knowledge management and electronic learning using mobile and hybrid learning technologies. Paul van Schaik is a Professor of Psychology at Teesside University and a National Teaching Fellow, with a special interest in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). His research focuses on interaction experience, technology acceptance, web-site usability, electronic performance support and decision-making. His work has been published in leading HCI journals.

    '...the chapters are all well written and authoritative, and together make useful reading. Having studied all sixteen chapters you will certainly be better informed - about many things including EPSS...' - Nick Rushby, British Journal of Educational Technology (BJET)