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Applying Cognitive Load Theory to Acquisition of a Dynamic Decision Making Skill

Applying Cognitive Load Theory to Acquisition of a Dynamic Decision Making Skill Christian Frederiksen, E. James Kehoe, Robert Wood, & Hakan Yasarcan The University of New South Wales Cognitive Load Theory Conference University of Wollongong 2 March 2008. Dynamic Decision Making.

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Applying Cognitive Load Theory to Acquisition of a Dynamic Decision Making Skill

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  1. Applying Cognitive Load Theory to Acquisition of a Dynamic Decision Making Skill Christian Frederiksen, E. James Kehoe, Robert Wood, & Hakan Yasarcan The University of New South Wales Cognitive Load Theory Conference University of Wollongong 2 March 2008

  2. Dynamic Decision Making • Actions alter the environment and therefore our next decisions • Time lags • Circular causality • Stocks and flows • Non-linear cause & effect

  3. Conundrum in Instructional Aids • Induction of germane load for schema formation • Induction of extraneous load • E.g., split attention effect

  4. Causal Maps • Somewhat effective in prior dynamic decision making tasks (Langley & Morecroft, 2004) • Jump-start schema formation in novices via enhancing germane load?

  5. Written Rules(Isolated-Elements) • Improves novice performance on static, procedural tasks (Pollock, Chandler, & Sweller, 2002) • Induces schema formation via isolated elements being processed sequentially rather than simultaneously

  6. Design Group Phase 1 Phase 2 Games 1-3 Q Games 4-6 CM Causal Map Q Game Only WR Written Rules Q Game Only Con Game Only Q Game Only

  7. Results: Market Share

  8. Results: Profit

  9. Results: Cognitive Load • Midrange to high cognitive loads, no differences between the 3 groups • No significant correlation with performance • Tended to decline as prior experience rose (r = -.44)

  10. Conclusions • Written rules (isolated-elements) ineffective • Less concise and therefore greater search time? (Larkin & Simon, 1987) • Misalignment between sequential processing of aid and dynamic task? (Marcus, Cooper, & Sweller, 1996)

  11. Conclusions • CM had consistent beneficial effect on market share • More complex effect on profit, though still beneficial overall • Large variability

  12. Conclusions • Paradox: no difference in cognitive load yet superior performance • Subjective rating scale measures total CL, not sophisticated enough to discern relative contributions of intrinsic, extraneous, germane

  13. Conclusions • Processes by which CM may enhance germane load: • Making spatial relations explicit (Marcus et al., 1996) • Drawing participant attention to relevant features(McCrudden et al., 2007)

  14. Next Steps • Role of prior experience? Direct comparison between novices and experts. • Optimal amount of time to be exposed to the instructional aid? • Can the causal map be improved? • Precisely measure germane load?

  15. Thank You Comments & questions? Christian Frederiksen crf983@gmail.com E. James Kehoe, PhD j.kehoe@unsw.edu.au

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