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Marvin S. Cohen

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Publications by Marvin S. Cohen (bibliography)

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1995
 
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Cohen, Marvin S. (1995): Training Critical Thinking in Army Battlefield Situation Assessment. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 39th Annual Meeting 1995. .

1994
 
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Moses, Franklin L., Salas, Ed, Cannon-Bowers, Janis A., Perez, Ray S., Roth, Emilie M., Mumaw, Randall J., Mirabella, Angelo, Cohen, Marvin S. and Klein, Gary (1994): Improved Training Methods: Research to Applications. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 38th Annual Meeting 1994. pp. 1150-1153.

How to train people to make good decisions, solve problems, and so on depends, as does all training, on some form of practice and feedback. The question for behavioral research often is how to improve on these basic requirements. Six panelists describe and discuss their research and experience with the relationship among training and factors such as group dynamics, stress, mental models, and naturalistic requirements. This session includes interaction among the panel and the audience.

© All rights reserved Moses et al. and/or Human Factors Society

1993
 
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Cohen, Marvin S. (1993): Metacognitive Strategies in Support of Recognition. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 37th Annual Meeting 1993. pp. 1102-1106.

Recent research on decision making has focused on complex real-world domains and experienced decision makers, in contrast to artificial tasks and novice subjects (e.g., Klein et al., 1993). This research has produced a revised view of decision making, one that stresses knowledge-based, recognitional processing rather than general-purpose, analytical methods. Nevertheless, a full understanding of recognitional processing and its implications for the design of decision aids has not yet been achieved. In particular, the active, controlled aspects of recognitional processing have not been fully accounted for in approaches that stress relatively automatic pattern recognition as the basis for responding.

© All rights reserved Cohen and/or Human Factors Society

 
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Changes to this page (author)

12 Feb 2010: Modified
27 Jun 2007: Added
26 Jun 2007: Added
26 Jun 2007: Added

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May 25

Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them.

-- Alfred North Whitehead

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Help us help you!