Date: 5/22/2020


Show Description:


“Jan Maarten is Principal Scientist at TNO and Professor of Applied Cognitive Psychology at the University of Twente, The Netherlands. His research interests include resilience engineering, team communication processes, and human-machine teaming. He is the lead editor on two influential volumes: Cognitive Task Analysis (2000) and Naturalistic Decision Making and Macrocognition(2008). He is co-editor of the recently released Oxford Handbook of Expertise (2020). He is editor in chief of the Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making. Dr. Schraagen holds a PhD in Cognitive Psychology from the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.”




Where to find Jan Maarten:


University of Twente


TNO


LinkedIn


JCEDM


The Oxford Handbook of Expertise




Learn more about NDM:


NaturalisticDecisionMaking.org


Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making




Where to find hosts Brian Moon and Laura Militello:


Brian’s website


Brian’s LinkedIn


Brian’s Twitter




Laura’s website


Laura’s LinkedIn


Laura’s Twitter




Timestamps:


What is the first paper you ever published? [2:00]


Experience conducting research with children [4:11]


Nature of Jan Maarten's 1993 research study on expertise [6:15]


Working with Herb Simon at Carnegie Mellon [10:57]


What led Jan Maarten to attend the 1994 NDM conference in Dayton [13:00]


Discussing the birth and significance of the book "Cognitive Task Analysis" [17:25]


Experience and advice for navigating difficult research interviews [20:35]


Interviewing technique advice for students [23:52]


The most exciting project Jan Maarten is working on right now [27:47]


Goals and directions for future work [36:50]


What is a "cyber-physical system"? [40:20]


Industries that could benefit from an NDM perspective [42:30]


Which project has been the most rewarding for you? [47:50]


Evaluating the success of Dutch navy training simulations [54:50]


One questions that can reveal if someone is an NDM practitioner [57:06]


Two truths and a lie [58:30]

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