Restricted Focus Viewer: A Tool for Tracking Visual Attention

Eye-tracking equipment has proven useful in examining the cognitive processes people use when understanding and reasoning with diagrams. However, eye-tracking has several drawbacks: accurate eye-tracking equipment is expensive, often awkward for participants, requires frequent re-calibration and the data can be difficult to interpret. We introduce an alternative tool for diagram research: the Restricted Focus Viewer (RFV). This is a computer program which takes an image, blurs it and displays it on a computer monitor, allowing the participant to see only a small region of the image in focus at any time. The region in focus can be moved using the computer mouse. The RFV records what the participant is focusing on at any point in time. It is cheap, non-intrusive, does not require calibration and provides accurate data about which region is being focused upon. We describe this tool, and also provide an experimental comparison with eye-tracking. We show that the RFV gives similar results to those obtained by Hegarty (1992) when using eye-tracking equipment to investigate reasoning about mechanical diagrams.

[1]  Lawrence K. Cormack,et al.  An Introduction to the Visual System: References , 1996 .

[2]  Gregory K. Tharp,et al.  Visual search in virtual environments , 1992, Electronic Imaging.

[3]  A. L. I︠A︡rbus Eye Movements and Vision , 1967 .

[4]  Susan K. Schnipke,et al.  Trials and tribulations of using an eye-tracking system , 2000, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[5]  A. L. Yarbus,et al.  Eye Movements and Vision , 1967, Springer US.

[6]  K. A. Ericsson,et al.  Protocol Analysis: Verbal Reports as Data , 1984 .

[7]  Theodore Steinke Eye Movement Studies In Cartography And Related Fields , 1987 .

[8]  Koichi Oda,et al.  Moving window generator for reading experiments , 1994 .

[9]  M. Tovée,et al.  An Introduction to the Visual System , 1997 .

[10]  Priti Shah,et al.  A Model of the Perceptual and Conceptual Processes in Graph Comprehension , 1998 .

[11]  M. Just,et al.  Eye fixations and cognitive processes , 1976, Cognitive Psychology.

[12]  M. Hegarty Mental animation: inferring motion from static displays of mechanical systems. , 1992, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[13]  J. Henderson,et al.  Object identification without foveal vision: Evidence from an artificial scotoma paradigm , 1997, Perception & psychophysics.

[14]  Nicole Ummelen Procedural And Declarative Information In Software Manuals. , 1997 .

[15]  K. Rayner,et al.  Eye movements and scene perception. , 1992, Canadian journal of psychology.

[16]  S. Coren,et al.  In Sensation and perception , 1979 .

[17]  K. Rayner Eye movements in reading and information processing: 20 years of research. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.