Skip to main content

Store

Humane Interfaces: Questions of Method and Practice in Cognitive Technology

$147.60

Description

Ever since the first successful International Cognitive Technology (CT) Conference in Hong Kong in August 1995, a growing concern about the dehumanising potential of machines, and the machining potential of the human mind, has pervaded the organisers’ thinking. When setting up the agenda for the Second International CT Conference in Aizu, Japan, in August of 1997, they were aware that a number of new approaches had seen the light, but that the need to integrate them within a human framework had become more urgent than ever, due to the accelerating pace of technological and commercialised developments in the computer related fields of industry and research

What the present book does is re-emphasize the importance of the ‘human factor’ – not as something that we should ‘also’ take into account, when doing technology, but as the primary driving force and supreme aim of our technological endeavours. Machining the human should not happen, but humanising the machine should. La Humacha should replace the Hemachine in our thinking about these matters.

Editor: Marsh, J P, Editor: Gorayska, B, Editor: Mey, J L

Topic: Computers – General Information
Media: Book
ISBN: 444828745
Language: English
Pages: 391

Additional information

Weight 1.64 lbs
Dimensions 9.21 × 6.14 × 0.94 in

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Humane Interfaces: Questions of Method and Practice in Cognitive Technology”