Title
Gaze and mouse coordination in everyday work
Abstract
Gaze tracking technology is increasingly common in desktop, laptop and mobile scenarios. Most previous research on eye gaze patterns during human-computer interaction has been confined to controlled laboratory studies. In this paper we present an in situ study of gaze and mouse coordination as participants went about their normal activities. We analyze the coordination between gaze and mouse, showing that gaze often leads the mouse, but not as much as previously reported, and in ways that depend on the type of target. Characterizing the relationship between the eyes and mouse in realistic multi-task settings highlights some new challenges we face in designing robust gaze-enhanced interaction techniques.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1145/2638728.2641692
UbiComp Adjunct
Keywords
Field
DocType
multimodal input,user interfaces,gaze tracking,mouse,target acquisition
In situ study,Computer vision,Gaze,Laptop,Target acquisition,Computer science,Eye tracking,Human–computer interaction,Artificial intelligence
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.41
15
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Daniel J. Liebling170634.07
Susan Dumais2139482130.47