Leon Harvey

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Publications by Leon Harvey (bibliography)

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» 1996 «

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Harvey, Leon and Anderson, John R. (1996): Transfer of Declarative Knowledge in Complex Information-Processing Domains. In Human-Computer Interaction, 11 (1) pp. 69-96

Declarative transfer from one domain to another can be observed in a systematic decrease in the time spent reading an instructional text and processing help during problem solving. Two experiments, done in the programming domain, tested the hypothesis that subjects introduced to a first programming language develop a representation of basic programming concepts that helps them integrate new declarative knowledge from a second programming language. This article shows that the effect on reading was greater for pages that were conceptually close across texts and for subjects who had fully mastered the basic concepts in the first language. A regression model of reading showed an effect on processes that are responsible for the analysis of novel words and examples, whereas general strategic reading processes remained unaffected. The increased reading speed was not accompanied by a greater understanding of the text. Effects of a common programming interface and transfer of procedural knowledge appeared to be negligible on the kind of problems considered. This study supports the distinction between procedural and declarative transfer.

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» 1995 «

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Harvey, Leon and Rousseau, Robert (1995): Development of Text-Editing Skill: From Semantic and Syntactic Mappings to Procedures. In Human-Computer Interaction, 10 (4) pp. 345-400

The mapping of different semantic and syntactic elements on the acquisition and practice of text-editing skill is used to test predictions from a production system model of skill development. Five text editors that use specific or general procedures that either obey a joint or a disjoint syntax have been designed and tested. Joint syntax and disjoint syntax, respectively, refer to whether defining the operation and the object in a procedure is done in a single or in two different steps. Tests of the editors were carried out using a set of varied tasks presented in two different serial task orders. Results showed that specific procedures are not necessarily faster to use than general ones for simple tasks, but general ones are faster for complex ones. Moreover, specific procedures are more prone to forgetting, as users consulted the help facilities more often. Users of joint editors consulted the help menu less often but for a longer time than users of disjoint editors. They also experienced a greater workload. It is suggested that joint and disjoint editors differ according to the way task parameters must be provided to the procedures. Finally, all measures were sensitive to serial task orders. The production system model of skill development is shown to provide an accurate explanation of group differences and of serial task order effects through strength accumulation, number of executed cycles, and cognitive operators.

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Changes to this page (author)

15 Feb 2010: Enabled abstracts to be shown on Leon Harvey's author page.
28 Apr 2003: Added the author to the bibliography

Publication statistics

Publication period:1995-1996
Publication count:2
Number of co-authors:2



Productive colleagues

Leon Harvey's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

John R. Anderson:28
Robert Rousseau:1


Collaboration count

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

John R. Anderson:1
Robert Rousseau:1

 

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Mar 19

As a rule, software systems do not work well until they have been used, and have failed repeatedly, in real applications.

-- Dave Parnas

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