Dr. Christian Lebiere
Christian Lebiere, Ph.D. is Research Scientist, Human-Computer
Interaction Institute, School of Computer Science,
Carnegie Mellon University.
His main research interest is cognitive architectures and their
applications to psychology, artificial intelligence, economics, decision
theory, and human-computer interaction.
Christian’s main project is
ACT-R.
ACT-R is a cognitive architecture: a theory for simulating and
understanding human cognition. Researchers working on ACT-R strive to
understand how people organize knowledge and produce intelligent
behavior. As the research continues, ACT-R evolves ever closer into a
system which can perform the full range of human cognitive tasks:
capturing in great detail the way we perceive, think about, and act on
the world.
He coauthored
The Atomic Components of Thought,
An Integrated Theory of the Mind,
Working Memory: Activation Limitations on Retrieval,
An Integrated Theory of List Memory,
ACT-R: a higher-level account of processing capacity,
Achieving Efficient and Cognitively Plausible Learning in
Backgammon,
The Newell Test for a theory of cognition,
Instance-based learning in dynamic decision making,
The Tower of Hanoi and Goal Structures,
The Visual Interface, and
The Newell Test for a Theory of Mind.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Christian earned his B.S. in Computer Science (Summa cum Laude) from the
Universite de Liege, Belgium in 1986. He earned his M.S. in Computer
Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1990. His major was
Artificial Intelligence and his minor was Programming Systems. He
earned his Ph.D. in Computer Science with the thesis
The Dynamics of
Cognition: An ACT-R Model of Cognitive Arithmetic from Carnegie
Mellon
University in 1998.