A Field Study on Spontaneous Gaze-based Interaction with a Public Display Using Pursuits
Titel Konferenzpublikation:
UbiComp/ISWC'15
Untertitel Konferenzpublikation:
Adjunct Adjunct Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing and Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Symposium on Wearable Computers
Konferenztitel:
ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing (2015, Osaka); ACM International Symposium on Wearable Computers (2015, Osaka)
Tagungsort:
Osaka, Japan
Jahr der Konferenz:
2015
Datum Beginn der Konferenz:
07.09.2015
Datum Ende der Konferenz:
11.09.2015
Verlagsort:
New York, NY, USA
Verlag:
ACM
Jahr:
2015
Seiten von - bis:
863-872
Sprache:
Englisch
Stichwörter:
field study ; pervasive displays ; public displays ; pursuits ; smooth pursuit eye movement
Abstract:
Smooth pursuit eye movements were recently introduced as a promising technique for calibration-free and thus spontaneous and natural gaze interaction. While pursuits have been evaluated in controlled laboratory studies, the technique has not yet been evaluated with respect to usability in the wild. We report on a field study in which we deployed a game on a public display where participants used pursuits to select fish moving in linear and circular trajectories at different speeds. The study ran for two days in a busy computer lab resulting in a total of 56 interactions. Results from our study show that linear trajectories are statistically faster to select via pursuits than circular trajectories. We also found that pursuits is well perceived by users who find it fast and responsive. «
Smooth pursuit eye movements were recently introduced as a promising technique for calibration-free and thus spontaneous and natural gaze interaction. While pursuits have been evaluated in controlled laboratory studies, the technique has not yet been evaluated with respect to usability in the wild. We report on a field study in which we deployed a game on a public display where participants used pursuits to select fish moving in linear and circular trajectories at different speeds. The study ran... »