American cognitive psychologist
Kent L. Norman is an American cognitive psychologist and an expert on computer rage . He graduated from Southern Methodist University in 1969 and earned a Ph.D. in experimental psychology from the University of Iowa in 1973.[ 1]
Norman was an associate professor of Psychology at the University of Maryland, College Park .[ 2] He retired January 2018.
In 1983, Norman co-founded the Laboratory for Automation Psychology and Decision Processes (LAPDP) as an affiliate of the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory (HCIL) [ 3] and the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS). The LAPDP studies the cognitive side of the human/computer interface , with an emphasis on the processes of judgment and decision making .
Norman designed and wrote the HyperCourseware [ 4] software system, in 1990, for the preparation and presentation of materials and the processes of education in a virtual learning environment . HyperCourseware has been used in the multimedia Teaching Theaters at the University of Maryland, College Park .
In 1997, Norman worked with the Center for the Design of Distance Education Methodology at the Open University of Israel and collaborated on new methods of Internet distance education .
Books written
Teaching
Norman is a retired Associate Professor of Psychology , University of Maryland, College Park and lead scientist of the LAPDP .[ 5] He teaches courses on cyberpsychology , human-computer interaction , the psychology of video games , and the psychology of social networks and social computing .[ 2]
See also
References
External links
International National Academics Other