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While an increasing number of mobile devices, such as smart phones and remote controls, deluge the modern everyday life, our understanding of what underlies the user experience (UX) remains rather speculative, lacking sound scientific basis. In this regard, current advances of cognitive neuroscience are most relevant and illuminating. In this lecture, I will focus mainly on the visuo-motor interaction entailed in the use of mobile devices, introduce emerging concepts in cognitive science, and ma ke connections between user experience of the devices and the findings obtained from cognitive and neural investigations. Special emphases will be placed on how visual attention is deployed both voluntarily and reactively during the human-device interaction, and how adaptive learning in novel situations and subconscious expectation based on previous experiences interplay in either provoking anxiety or providing satisfaction in the user experience. | |
1987 ¼¿ï´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ Á¹¾÷ (M.D.) 1992 ¹Ì±¹ MIT ¹Ú»ç (Ph.D. in Neuroscience) 1996 ¹Ì±¹ ÄÚ³Ú´ëºÎ¼Óº´¿ø ½Å°æ°ú ¼ö·Ã 1997 ¹Ì±¹ ÄÚ³Ú´ëºÎ¼Óº´¿ø ¹× Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer CenterÀüÀÓÀÇ 2003-10 Scientist, The Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute 1997-ÇöÀç ¼¿ï´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ ½Å°æ°ú ¹× ´ëÇпø ÀÎÁö°úÇÐ Çùµ¿°úÁ¤ ±³¼ö | |