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<bibtex:entry id="rasmussen83">
  <bibtex:article>
    <bibtex:author>Rasmussen&#44; Jens</bibtex:author>

    <bibtex:title>Skills&#44; rules&#44; and knowledge: signals&#44; signs&#44; and symbols&#44; and other distinctions in human performance models</bibtex:title>

    <bibtex:journal>IEEE Transactions on Systems&#44; Man and Cybernetics</bibtex:journal>

    <bibtex:year>1983</bibtex:year>
    <bibtex:volume>13</bibtex:volume>


    <bibtex:pages>257&#x2013;266</bibtex:pages>
    <bibtex:number>3</bibtex:number>
    <bibtex:edition>SMC&#45;13</bibtex:edition>






    <bibtex:abstract>The introduction of information&#13;&#10;technology based on digital computers for the&#13;&#10;design of man&#45;machine interface systems has led to&#13;&#10;a requirement for consistent models of human&#13;&#10;performance in routine task environments and&#13;&#10;during unfamiliar task conditions. A discussion is&#13;&#10;presented of the requirement for different types of&#13;&#10;models for representing performance at the skill&#45;&#44;&#13;&#10;rule&#45;&#44; and knowledge&#45;based levels&#44; together with a&#13;&#10;review of the different ways in which information is&#13;&#10;perceived at these different levels in terms of&#13;&#10;signals signs&#44; and symbols. Particular attention is&#13;&#10;paid to the different possible ways of representing&#13;&#10;system properties which underlie knowledge&#45;based&#13;&#10;performance and which can b characterized at&#13;&#10;several levels of abstraction&#8212;from the&#13;&#10;representation of physical form&#44; through functional&#13;&#10;representation&#44; to representation in terms of&#13;&#10;intention or purpose. Furthermore&#44; the role of&#13;&#10;qualitative and quantitative models in the design&#13;&#10;and evaluation of interface systems is mentioned&#44;&#13;&#10;and the need to consider such distinctions carefully&#13;&#10;is discussed</bibtex:abstract>
    <bibtex:url>http://www.cs.toronto.edu/&#126;nernst/papers/Rasmussen&#95;&#45;&#95;SRK.pdf</bibtex:url>






    <bibtex:keywords>framework cognition</bibtex:keywords>



  </bibtex:article>
</bibtex:entry>
</bibtex:file>

