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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Identifying fixations and saccades in eye-tracking protocols

TLDR
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.

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Citations
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Book

Eye Tracking Methodology: Theory and Practice

TL;DR: To the Human Visual System (HVS), Visual Attention, Neurological Substrate of the HVS, and Neuroscience and Psychology, and Industrial Engineering and Human Factors.
Book ChapterDOI

Eye Tracking in Human-Computer Interaction and Usability Research: Ready to Deliver the Promises

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the application of eye movements to user interfaces, both for analyzing interfaces (measuring usability) and as an actual control medium within a human–computer dialogue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eye Movement Analysis for Activity Recognition Using Electrooculography

TL;DR: The work demonstrates the promise of eye-based activity recognition (EAR) and opens up discussion on the wider applicability of EAR to other activities that are difficult, or even impossible, to detect using common sensing modalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

An adaptive algorithm for fixation, saccade, and glissade detection in eyetracking data

TL;DR: It is argued that researchers must actively choose whether to assign the glissades to saccades or fixations; the choice affects dependent variables such as fixation and saccade duration significantly, and current algorithms do not offer this choice.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Eye tracking in web search tasks: design implications

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).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A tutorial on hidden Markov models and selected applications in speech recognition

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of the basic theory of hidden Markov models (HMMs) as originated by L.E. Baum and T. Petrie (1966) and give practical details on methods of implementation of the theory along with a description of selected applications of HMMs to distinct problems in speech recognition.
Book

Clustering Algorithms

Journal ArticleDOI

Where we look when we steer

TL;DR: It is found that drivers rely particularly on the 'tangent point' on the inside of each curve, seeking this point 1–2 s before each bend and returning to it throughout the bend, and this work examines the way this information is used.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scanpaths in saccadic eye movements while viewing and recognizing patterns

TL;DR: Subjects' eye movements were recorded while they viewed and then recognized patterns to reveal the sequence of internal processing, consistent with a serial theory of pattern learning and recognition previously proposed.