The advancement of computer technologies, particularly the development of hypertext and interactive video, has presented to the academic community a new and effective tool for teaching and learning. An application of these technologies led to the concept of a hypermedia resource library-a set of integrated interactive computer modules that allow the user to browse and study topically specific content in a unique way. Such modules electronically present textual, graphic, and realtime video materials that instruct and quiz the user, offer a means for computer-based laboratory experimentation and data analysis, and provide statistical evaluation of the user's progress. This paper will focus on the technology of computer-based hypermedia and the specific concept within. this context of the artificially intelligent hypermedia resource library.
180Psychology, as with most academic disciplines, is typically taught in a linear fashion that progresses topically to higher and higher degrees of detail and specialization. Thus an introductory psychology course will typically include a survey of specialized topics, including learning, personality, social psychology, developmental psychology, physiological psychology, perception, cognition, and so forth. Upper-division courses are similarly recognizable by their more in-depth introduction to these same topics and include full courses on learning, personality, social psychology, and so forth. Advanced undergraduate and graduate courses offer more detail on these same topics, although they sometimes focus on subtopics within the main topic, for example, aggression as a subspecialization of social psychology.Almost all teachers working within such educational curricula have, over their careers, developed their own personal collections of resources that support their teaching of these different levels of topical specialization. Teachers may have favorite films, slides, and overhead transparencies they use in the introductory course to supplement various lectures and reading assignments, including readings in the primary text and those assigned and/or recommended that supplement the text. In advanced courses, teachers may rely on more specialized secondary readings, such as a topical introductory text plus personalized collections of primary readings that illustrate pet concepts or points of interest. At this level, films and other audiovisuals are more specific and tailored to the advanced topical interests and elaborations. Teachers typiResearch and program development reported in this paper were funded in part by NSF-ILl Grant USE-8952419. Correspondence should be addressed to R. D. Ray. Rollins College. Department of Psychology, 1000 Holt Ave.-27f1J, Winter Park, FL 32789; e-mail: rdray@rollins.Copyright 1992 Psychonomic Society, Inc.cally strive to maintain and update personalized libraries of the various teaching resources they wish to keep at their fingertips to meet their instructional needs.With the increasing availability and sophistication of personal computers, the dev...