Refine the decision cycle model of interaction in design multimedia interface to support for learner control

Authors

  • Ngo Anh Tuan Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology and Education, Vietnam

Corressponding author's email:

tuanan@hcmute.edu.vn

Keywords:

multimedia, learning environment

Abstract

Multimedia technology offers instructional designers an unprecedented opportunity to create richly interactive learning environments. With greater design freedom comes complexity. The standard answer to the problems of too much choice, disorientation, and complex navigation is thought to lie in the way we design the interactivity in a system. Unfortunately, the theory of interactivity is at an early stage of development. After critiquing the decision cycle model of interaction – the received theory in human computer interaction – This paper presents arguments to show that humans have several ways of interacting with their environments which resist accommodation in the decision cycle model. These additional ways of interacting include: preparing the environment, maintaining the environment, and reshaping the cognitive congeniality of the environment. Understanding how these actions simplify the computational complexity of our mental processes is the first step in designing the right sort of resources and scaffolding necessary for tractable learner controlled learning environments.

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References

Chapman D. (1987). Planning for Conjunctive Goals. Artificial Intelligent.

Duffy, & Jonassen, (Eds.), (1992) Constructivism and the Technology of Instruction: A conversation. Hillsdale,N.J: Laurence Erlbaum Associates.

Gibson J.J. (1979). The ecological approach to visual perception. Boston. Houghton Mifflin.

Hammond, K., converse T., & Grass J.W(1995). Stabilization of Environments. Artificial Intelligence, Tập. 73:1, trang 305.....

Published

28-06-2012

How to Cite

[1]
Ngô Anh Tuấn, “Refine the decision cycle model of interaction in design multimedia interface to support for learner control”, JTE, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 79–84, Jun. 2012.

Issue

Section

Research Article

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