Chris Herdman
Professor
Psychology
Carleton University
Canada
Biography
Chris Herdman Professor Degrees: Ph.D. (Alberta)
Research Interest
The objective of my research is to discover fundamental principles of human perception and cognition and to apply these principles to the design, implementation and evaluation of advanced human-machine systems. My lab, located in the Visualization and Simulation Centre (VSIM), is very interdisciplinary and involves students not only from Psychology, but from Cognitive Science, Biology and Engineering.
Publications
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Tovey, M. & Herdman, C.M. (2014). Seeing changes: How familiarity alters our perception of change. Visual Cognition, 22:2, 214-238.
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Van Benthem, K., & Herdman, C.M. (2014). Individual pilot factors predict simulated runway incursion outcomes. In P. Tsang & J. Flach (eds.), Advances in Aviation Psychology, Vol. 1, p.197-214. Ashgate.
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Van Benthem, K., Herdman, C.M., Tolton, R.G., & LeFevre, J. (2015). Prospective memory failures: effects of cue salience, workload, and pilot individual differences. Aerospace Medicine and Human Performance, 86(4), 366-373.