Publications by authors named "Cheryl I Johnson"

The United States military services are modernizing their training and education curricula by leveraging advances in technology to deliver instruction that is more engaging and responsive to trainees' needs and better prepares them for the future fight. Adaptive training (AT), or training tailored to the strengths and weaknesses of individual trainees, is a promising technique to meet these modernization goals. The research literature, however, is sporadic and does not clearly prescribe best practices for its employment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adaptive Training (AT) has been shown to be an effective technique for training tasks in multiple domains. Despite the promise AT has shown as a training technique, researchers remain unsure of the specific qualities that improve learning. In this experiment, we examined how adaptation schedule affects the efficacy and efficiency of difficulty adaptation in computer-based training.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In three studies, eye movements of participants were recorded while they viewed a single-slide multimedia presentation about how car brakes work. Some of the participants saw an integrated presentation in which each segment of words was presented near its corresponding area of the diagram (integrated group, Experiments 1 and 3) or an integrated presentation that also included additional labels identifying each part (integrated-with-labels group, Experiment 2), whereas others saw a separated presentation in which the words were presented as a paragraph below the diagrams (separated group, Experiments 1 and 2) or as a legend below the diagrams (legend group, Experiment 3). On measures of cognitive processing during learning, the integrated groups made significantly more eye-movements from text to diagram and vice versa (integrative transitions; d = 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF