Michael -
Although eye movements almost always precede reaching / grasping movements
to objects in the world around us, the reverse is not true (e.g., we don't
reach to everything we look at). In the lab at the University of Rochester,
we see the same pattern in graphical interfaces: eye movements to objects
presented on a computer monitor which slightly precede the mouse cursor
pointing / clicking. But, as you would expect, we also see eye movements to
other objects on the screen that are not accessed with the mouse-driven
cursor. These other eye movements - even in very routine tasks - seem to
play an important role in short term memory.
For more information check out the following references.
Ballard, D. H., Hayhoe, M. M., Li, F., & Whitehead, S. D. (1992). Hand-eye
coordination during sequential tasks. Phil. Trans. Royal Society of London,
337, 331-339.
Ballard, D. H., Hayhoe, M. M., & Pelz, J. B. (1994b). Memory representations
in natural tasks. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 7(1), 66-80.
Hayhoe, M., Bensinger, D. & Ballard (1998) Task constraints in visual
working memory. Vision Research, 38, 125-137.
Karn, K. & Zelinsky, G. (1996) Driving and dish washing: Failure of the
correspondence metaphor for memory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, 198.
Karn, K. & Hayhoe, M. (2000) Memory representations guide targeting eye
movements in a natural task. Visual Cognition. 7:673-703.
Keith S. Karn, Ph.D.
[log in to unmask]
716-427-1561
Xerox Corporation, Industrial Design / Human Interface Department
University of Rochester, Center for Visual Science, Adjunct Assistant
Professor
-----Original Message-----
From: Woermann, Michael [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, March 05, 2001 9:20 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [EM_LIST] gaze and mouse-tracking behaviour
Hello!
I am looking for empirical evidence for the relation between gaze behaviour
and clicking behaviour for internet usage.
I suppose that in the field of graphical user interfaces eye and mouse
movements are somewhat related. If so, complicated eye tracking could be
substituted by mouse tracking at least for some research purposes.
Does anyone know studies that tackle this argument?
mit größtem vergnügen
michael wörmann
market research
______________________________________
die argonauten_
the e-consumer agency
www.argonauten.de
wap.argonauten.de
osterwaldstraße 10, d 80805 münchen
tel +49 (0)89_36 81 59_412
fax +49 (0)89_36 81 59_499
mailto:[log in to unmask]
--
EYE-MOVEMENT mailing list ([log in to unmask])
N.B. Replies are sent to the list, not the sender
To unsubscribe, etc. see
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/files/eye-movement/introduction.html
Other queries to list owner at [log in to unmask]
--
EYE-MOVEMENT mailing list ([log in to unmask])
N.B. Replies are sent to the list, not the sender
To unsubscribe, etc. see http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/files/eye-movement/introduction.html
Other queries to list owner at [log in to unmask]
|