Title :
Program Comprehension and Implications of Human Navigational Approaches
Author :
Moorthy, Senthilrajan ; Samadzadeh, M.H.
Author_Institution :
Comput. Sci. Dept., Oklahoma State Univ., Stillwater, OK, USA
Abstract :
Cognitive scientists, psychologists, and other researchers have endeavored over the past three decades to identify the cognitive functions underpinning human navigation and its possible correlations with other characteristics. The answer to the basic question of how/why some people are good at following directions and some people are not, is yet to be determined conclusively. The scope of this research work included both theoretical and empirical studies of human direction sensitivity and the cognitive tests that attempt to test hypotheses about individual differences in spatial/temporal attention spans as well as a set of program comprehension questionnaire-based tests about the debugging/testing of computer programs and program comprehension. This work was done in the context of the relevant cognitive-based perceptual and spatial tests. The test results obtained suggest that programmers´ directional detection skills appear to have some correlations with their program comprehension abilities.
Keywords :
cognition; navigation; program debugging; program testing; psychology; cognitive test; cognitive-based perceptual test; cognitive-based spatial test; computer program debugging; computer program testing; human cognitive function; human direction sensitivity; human navigational approach; program comprehension; programmer directional detection skills; spatial-temporal attention span; Atmospheric measurements; Correlation; Educational institutions; Humans; Navigation; Particle measurements; Visualization; navigation; perceptual and spatial tests; program comprehension;
Conference_Titel :
Systems Engineering (ICSEng), 2011 21st International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1078-0
DOI :
10.1109/ICSEng.2011.41