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Conference

Eye Tracking Research & Application 

About: Eye Tracking Research & Application is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Eye tracking & Computer science. Over the lifetime, 550 publications have been published by the conference receiving 19070 citations.

Papers published on a yearly basis

Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
08 Nov 2000
TL;DR: A taxonomy of fixation identification algorithms is proposed that classifies algorithms in terms of how they utilize spatial and temporal information in eye-tracking protocols in order to evaluate and compare these algorithms with respect to a number of qualitative characteristics.
Abstract: The process of fixation identification—separating and labeling fixations and saccades in eye-tracking protocols—is an essential part of eye-movement data analysis and can have a dramatic impact on higher-level analyses. However, algorithms for performing fixation identification are often described informally and rarely compared in a meaningful way. In this paper we propose a taxonomy of fixation identification algorithms that classifies algorithms in terms of how they utilize spatial and temporal information in eye-tracking protocols. Using this taxonomy, we describe five algorithms that are representative of different classes in the taxonomy and are based on commonly employed techniques. We then evaluate and compare these algorithms with respect to a number of qualitative characteristics. The results of these comparisons offer interesting implications for the use of the various algorithms in future work.

1,809 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
25 Mar 2002
TL;DR: The features, functionality and methods used in the eye typing systems developed in the last twenty years are considered and other communication related issues, among them customization and voice output are addressed.
Abstract: Eye typing provides a means of communication for severely handicapped people, even those who are only capable of moving their eyes. This paper considers the features, functionality and methods used in the eye typing systems developed in the last twenty years. Primary concerned with text production, the paper also addresses other communication related issues, among them customization and voice output.

490 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
25 Mar 2002
TL;DR: Based on analysis of screen sequences, there was little evidence that search became more directed as screen sequence increased, and navigation among portlets, when at least two columns exist, was biased towards horizontal search (across columns) as opposed to vertical search (within column).
Abstract: An eye tracking study was conducted to evaluate specific design features for a prototype web portal application. This software serves independent web content through separate, rectangular, user-modifiable portlets on a web page. Each of seven participants navigated across multiple web pages while conducting six specific tasks, such as removing a link from a portlet. Specific experimental questions included (1) whether eye tracking-derived parameters were related to page sequence or user actions preceding page visits, (2) whether users were biased to traveling vertically or horizontally while viewing a web page, and (3) whether specific sub-features of portlets were visited in any particular order. Participants required 2-15 screens, and from 7-360+ seconds to complete each task. Based on analysis of screen sequences, there was little evidence that search became more directed as screen sequence increased. Navigation among portlets, when at least two columns exist, was biased towards horizontal search (across columns) as opposed to vertical search (within column). Within a portlet, the header bar was not reliably visited prior to the portlet's body, evidence that header bars are not reliably used for navigation cues. Initial design recommendations emphasized the need to place critical portlets on the left and top of the web portal area, and that related portlets do not need to appear in the same column. Further experimental replications are recommended to generalize these results to other applications.

434 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
22 Mar 2004
TL;DR: The results indicate that gender of subjects, the viewing order of a web page, and the interaction between page order and site type influences online ocular behavior.
Abstract: The World Wide Web has become a ubiquitous information source and communication channel. With such an extensive user population, it is imperative to understand how web users view different web pages. Based on an eye tracking study of 30 subjects on 22 web pages from 11 popular web sites, this research intends to explore the determinants of ocular behavior on a single web page: whether it is determined by individual differences of the subjects, different types of web sites, the order of web pages being viewed, or the task at hand. The results indicate that gender of subjects, the viewing order of a web page, and the interaction between page order and site type influences online ocular behavior. Task instruction did not significantly affect web viewing behavior. Scanpath analysis revealed that the complexity of web page design influences the degree of scanpath variation among different subjects on the same web page. The contributions and limitations of this research, and future research directions are discussed.

351 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
22 Mar 2010
TL;DR: The physiological and performance measures show high correspondence suggesting that remote eye tracking might provide reliable driver cognitive load estimation, especially in simulators, and introduced a new pupillometric cognitive load measure that shows promise in tracking cognitive load changes on time scales of several seconds.
Abstract: We report on the results of a study in which pairs of subjects were involved in spoken dialogues and one of the subjects also operated a simulated vehicle. We estimated the driver's cognitive load based on pupil size measurements from a remote eye tracker. We compared the cognitive load estimates based on the physiological pupillometric data and driving performance data. The physiological and performance measures show high correspondence suggesting that remote eye tracking might provide reliable driver cognitive load estimation, especially in simulators. We also introduced a new pupillometric cognitive load measure that shows promise in tracking cognitive load changes on time scales of several seconds.

335 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Conference in previous years
YearPapers
202389
202269
20161
201477
201283
201066