Conceptualizing in Assembly Tasks

Author:

Baggett Patricia1,Ehrenfeucht Andrzej2

Affiliation:

1. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

2. University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

A method is presented to determine a person's hypothetical conceptualization of an object—its breakdown into subassemblies, sub-subassemblies, and so on—from the person's sequence of requests for pieces used in constructing it. Also, a technique is provided to determine whether, given a group of conceptualizations, there is a typical one. Results of the experiments showed that assembly instructions presenting a typical conceptualization yielded better structural and functional performance than did instructions presenting a minority conceptualization. Conceptualizations were derived from objects built from memory (and incorrectly) by people who first studied typical or minority instructions. A new distance measure was used to determine how far these conceptualizations were from those presented in the instructions. Typical instructions yielded typical conceptualizations; importantly, minority instructions also yielded typical conceptualizations, although they were significantly less typical than those from typical instructions. The results are discussed in terms of both their theoretical and methodological significance and their practical significance in the design of procedural instructions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics

Reference17 articles.

1. Four principles for designing instructions

2. How an unfamiliar thing should be called

3. Baggett, P., Ehrenfeucht, A., and Hanna, J. (1987). Implementing a multimedia knowledge representation for interactive procedural instructions. Proceedings, Rocky Mountain Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 99-113. Boulder: Colorado Institute for Artificial Intelligence, College of Business and Administration, University of Colorado.

4. An Analysis of Sequences of Restricted Associative Responses

5. Pauses as recoding points in letter series.

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