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Computational assessment of long-term memory structures from SDA-M related to action sequences

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  • Benjamin Strenge
  • Ludwig Vogel
  • Thomas Schack

Abstract

Assistance systems should be able to adapt to individual task-related skills and knowledge. Structural-dimensional analysis of mental representations (SDA-M) is an established method for retrieving human memory structures related to specific activities. For this purpose, SDA-M involves a semi-automatized survey of users (the “split procedure”), which yields data about users’ associations between action representations in long-term memory. Up to now this data about associations has commonly been clustered and visualized by SDA-M software in the form of dendrograms that can be used by human experts as a tool to (manually) assess users’ individual expertise and identify potential issues with respect to predefined action sequences. This article presents new algorithmic approaches for automatizing the process of assessing task-related memory structures based on SDA-M data to predict probable errors in action sequences. This automation enables direct integration into technical systems, e.g. user-adaptive assistance systems. An evaluation study has compared the automatized computational assessments to predictions made by human scholars based on visualizations of SDA-M data. The different algorithms’ outputs matched human experts’ manual assessments in 84% to 86% of the test cases.

Suggested Citation

  • Benjamin Strenge & Ludwig Vogel & Thomas Schack, 2019. "Computational assessment of long-term memory structures from SDA-M related to action sequences," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(2), pages 1-19, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0212414
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212414
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