DocumentCode
2876571
Title
Assessing Media Relevance via Eye Tracking
Author
Yang, Cheng-Ta ; Chang, Wen-Sheng ; Cheng, Fan-Ning ; Teng, Wei-Guang
Author_Institution
Dept. of Psychol., Nat. Cheng Kung Univ., Tainan, Taiwan
fYear
2011
fDate
25-27 July 2011
Firstpage
722
Lastpage
727
Abstract
To ease the problem of data overloading, it is crucial to understand the user behavior when s/he interacts with online contents, or more specifically, a web page containing several entries for further exploration. We devise to estimate the relevance of an entry to the user goal by observing eye movements as implicit feedback. Specifically, this study proposes a framework that assumes eye movement measures can be used to infer a user´s cognition. A rating task was conducted in which subjects were required to judge whether an image was relevant to a word. Results showed that the total fixation duration and the fixation count can be used to discriminate between the relevant and irrelevant conditions, in contrast, the first fixation duration cannot. In addition, the subjective rating and relevancy manipulation interacted on the total fixation duration. Converging evidence verifies the assumption we have proposed.
Keywords
cognition; eye; iris recognition; relevance feedback; social networking (online); Web page; eye movement; eye tracking; fixation count; media relevance; online contents; relevancy manipulation; total fixation duration; user cognition; Cognition; Distribution functions; Search engines; Time factors; Tracking; Visualization; eye movement; relevance feedback; social media;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining (ASONAM), 2011 International Conference on
Conference_Location
Kaohsiung
Print_ISBN
978-1-61284-758-0
Electronic_ISBN
978-0-7695-4375-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ASONAM.2011.122
Filename
5992688
Link To Document