Prize lecture: What do we Think we are Doing?
- π€ Speaker: Alan Blackwell (University of Cambridge)
- π Date & Time: Thursday 26 October 2017, 14:15 - 15:15
- π Venue: SS03 Meeting Room, Computer Laboratory
Abstract
Alan will be repeating the talk he was invited to give at IEEE Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing (VL/HCC) 2017, given after receiving an award for 20-year Most Influential Paper. His 1996 paper [1] challenged the VL community to ask What do we think we are doing? It might now be called a Systematic Literature Review, although formal procedures for SLR were not developed until later. It made a textual analysis of publications in which authors described a cognitive rationale for VL research, observing that many relied on insights from folk psychology, from introspection, or speculative computer analogies to the brain. This was a study of metacognition β beliefs about oneβs cognitive ability that shape the mental strategies we choose. In the case of programming language designers, the choices being shaped were not their own problem-solving strategies (something we all do), but the design rationale for new languages (which will affect others).
[1] Blackwell, A.F. (1996). Metacognitive Theories of Visual Programming: What do we think we are doing? In Proceedings IEEE Symposium on Visual Languages, pp. 240-246.
Series This talk is part of the Rainbow Group Seminars series.
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Thursday 26 October 2017, 14:15-15:15