Center for Interactive Systems Engineering: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The mission of Center for Interactive Systems Engineering is to investigate the design, implementation, and evaluation of interactive, next-generation computing solutions in complex domains including, but not limited to, health care and health care delivery, with the purpose of supporting the development of systems that are both usable and accessible. This is accomplished through research that is focused on the psychological processes underlying the interaction of people with complex systems, particularly computer systems, with the ultimate goal of combining robust empirical results with the development of engineering models of human performance that can aid in the design of real-world systems. | The mission of Center for Interactive Systems Engineering is to investigate the design, implementation, and evaluation of interactive, next-generation computing solutions in complex domains including, but not limited to, health care and health care delivery, with the purpose of supporting the development of systems that are both usable and accessible. This is accomplished through research that is focused on the psychological processes underlying the interaction of people with complex systems, particularly computer systems, with the ultimate goal of combining robust empirical results with the development of engineering models of human performance that can aid in the design of real-world systems. | ||
[[Category: | == External links == | ||
*[http://cise.bme.gatech.edu/ Center for Interactive Systems Engineering] | |||
[[Category: Institutions]] |
Latest revision as of 17:30, 5 June 2006
The mission of Center for Interactive Systems Engineering is to investigate the design, implementation, and evaluation of interactive, next-generation computing solutions in complex domains including, but not limited to, health care and health care delivery, with the purpose of supporting the development of systems that are both usable and accessible. This is accomplished through research that is focused on the psychological processes underlying the interaction of people with complex systems, particularly computer systems, with the ultimate goal of combining robust empirical results with the development of engineering models of human performance that can aid in the design of real-world systems.