Title :
Mitigating cognitive bottlenecks via an augmented cognition adaptive system
Author :
Dorneich, Michael C. ; Whitlow, Stephen D. ; Ververs, Patricia May ; Rogers, William H.
Author_Institution :
Human Centered Syst. COE, Honeywell Labs., Minneapolis, MN, USA
Abstract :
A conceptual framework for designing human-computer cognitive systems is proposed. The Cognitive Bottleneck Framework (CBF) identifies four significant "cognitive bottlenecks" that negatively impact the quality and tempo of decision making: (1) Information overload; humans cannot manage the vast amounts of information delivered by their computing environment, (2) Sequential cognitive processing; while information arrives in parallel, humans are essentially serial processors that can only address a single thread or task at a time, (3) Narrow user input capabilities: the system has more sophisticated means of communicating to the human than the human has of communicating to the system, and (4) Function mis-allocation; tasks are allocated to humans by default rather than by design, leaving them with tasks for which they are cognitively ill-suited. The overall purpose of CBF is to "right-size" these bottlenecks, remove constraints that restrict information flow, and better fit information channels to the abilities of either the human or computer.
Keywords :
adaptive systems; cognitive systems; decision making; man-machine systems; cognition adaptive system; cognitive bottleneck framework; decision making; function misallocation; human-computer cognitive systems; information channels; information flow; information overload; narrow user input capabilities; sequential cognitive processing; serial processors; Adaptive systems; Application software; Cognition; Concurrent computing; Decision making; Humans; Information processing; Laboratories; Modems; Yarn;
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, 2003. IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7952-7
DOI :
10.1109/ICSMC.2003.1243935