Aucbvax.1538
fa.apollo
utzoo!duke!mhtsa!ucbvax!SHRAGE@WHARTON-10
Fri Jun  5 16:32:13 1981
Most recent IBM system's journal: vol 20, # 2 1981
Topic: "Human Factors"

Contents:

Forward: The Human Side of Computers (L.M.Branscomb)
Procedures of the Human Factors Center at San Jose (R.S.Hirsch)
[A rather nice discussion of data collection and analysis technique mainly
 of keyboard typing speed and errors.  They discuss the ABCD and QWERTY with
 very brief mention of Dvorak.  They discuss the Japanese keyboards at length.
 TOUCHLINE, AUDIOLINE and CRT readability, crosshair manipulation on a CRT,
 etc.  Details of procedure and analysis are worth at least glancing at.]

Effects of Manual Style on Performance in Education and Machine Maintenance
(J.M.Judisch, B.A.Rupp, and R.A.Dassinger)
[Compares the GIM (graphic integrated manual) with a standard head on views
 manual.  Experimental report -- design and results.  Not interesting to me
 so I didn't read it in detail and thus can't report very well.]

Natural Lanuage Programming: Styles, Stratagies, and Contrasts.
(Lance Miller [listed as L.A.Miller in IBMese])
[Examines the utility of NL by experiments designed to compare the under-
 standability and ease of writing of natural language vs. programming
 language instructions.  Very nice -- too long to properly summarize but
 seriously worth the time if you are a Lance Miller fan or into NL.  "The
 results provide insight both on the manner in which people express computer-
 like procedures ``naturally'' and on what features programming languages
 should include if they are to be made more ``natural-like''" (from the
 abstract)]

Human Factors in the Development of a Family of Plant Data Communications
Terminals.  (M.Ominsky) [I didn't read this -- looks like keyboard design.]

Human Factors in Communication. (J.C.Thomas and J.M.Carroll)
[A very interesting, sometimes philosophical, mostly linguistic discussion of
 the application of naming (processes and objects), relationals, quantification
 conditionals, comments, connectives, etc as they are used in natural language
 and how the understanding of English (or whatever) can help us to communicate
 with interactive systems.  This would be a great review article to hand out to
 a course in interactive systems.]

This issue is probably worth your time to pick up if any of the above interests
you but you don't want particularly technical reading on it (the first article
is somewhat technical in the experiemental analysis).  Copyright for all quotes
above to IBM corporation.

[If anyone knows of mailing lists such as "natural-language" or "interactive-
systems" that would like this please make a copy to that list.  Also, you might
add my name there as well -- such mlists would probably interest me].

-- Jeff




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