A Survey on Measuring Cognitive Workload in Human-Computer Interaction
Journal article, 2023

The ever-increasing number of computing devices around us results in more and more systems competing for our attention, making cognitive workload a crucial factor for the user experience of human-computer interfaces. Research in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has used various metrics to determine users' mental demands. However, there needs to be a systematic way to choose an appropriate and effective measure for cognitive workload in experimental setups, posing a challenge to their reproducibility. We present a literature survey of past and current metrics for cognitive workload used throughout HCI literature to address this challenge. By initially exploring what cognitive workload resembles in the HCI context, we derive a categorization supporting researchers and practitioners in selecting cognitive workload metrics for system design and evaluation. We conclude with three following research gaps: (1) defining and interpreting cognitive workload in HCI, (2) the hidden cost of the NASA-TLX, and (3) HCI research as a catalyst for workload-aware systems, highlighting that HCI research has to deepen and conceptualize the understanding of cognitive workload in the context of interactive computing systems.

Cognitive workload

questionnaires

workload assessment

categorization

cognition-aware interfaces

workload-aware computing

physiological sensing

Author

Thomas Kosch

Humboldt University of Berlin

Jakob Karolus

Deutsches Forschungszentrum fur Kunstliche Intelligenz

Johannes Zagermann

University of Konstanz

Harald Reiterer

University of Konstanz

Albrecht Schmidt

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU)

Paweł W. Woźniak

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction Design and Software Engineering

ACM Computing Surveys

0360-0300 (ISSN) 15577341 (eISSN)

Vol. 55 13s 283

Subject Categories

Human Aspects of ICT

Human Computer Interaction

Computer Vision and Robotics (Autonomous Systems)

DOI

10.1145/3582272

More information

Latest update

9/11/2023