Litcius/Paper detail

Introduction to the Special Issue on Advanced Technologies in Assessment: A Science-Practice Concern

Cornelius J. König, Andrew M. Demetriou, Philipp Glock, Annemarie M. F. Hiemstra, Dragoş Iliescu, Camelia Ionescu, Markus Langer, Cynthia C. S. Liem, Anja Linnenbürger, Rudolf Siegel, Illias Vartholomaios

2020Personnel Assessment and Decisions11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article is based on conversations from the project “Big Data in Psychological Assessment” (BDPA) funded by the European Union, which was initiated because of the advances in data science and artificial intelligence that offer tremendous opportunities for personnel assessment practice in handling and interpreting this kind of data. We argue that psychologists and computer scientists can benefit from interdisciplinary collaboration. This article aims to inform psychologists who are interested in working with computer scientists about the potentials of interdisciplinary collaboration, as well as the challenges such as differing terminologies, foci of interest, data quality standards, approaches to data analyses, and diverging publication practices. Finally, we provide recommendations preparing psychologists who want to engage in collaborations with computer scientists. We argue that psychologists should proactively approach computer scientists, learn computer scientific fundamentals, appreciate that research interests are likely to converge, and prepare novice psychologists for a data-oriented scientific future.

Topics & Concepts

Engineering ethicsBig dataQuality (philosophy)Computer scienceManagement sciencePsychologyEngineeringEpistemologyData miningPhilosophyExplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI)Cognitive Science and MappingArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education