Showing posts with label Lund Universitet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lund Universitet. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Abstracts from SWAET 2010


The booklet containing the abstracts for the Scandinavian Workshop on Applied Eye Tracking (SWAET) is now available for download, 55 pages about 1Mb. The abstracts spans a wide range from gaze interaction to behavior and perception. A short one page format makes it attractive to venture into a multitude of domains and acts as a nice little starting point for digging deeper. Shame I couldn't attend, maybe next year. Kudos for making this booklet available.




 Title Authors
 Eye movements during mental imagery are not perceptual re-enactments R. Johansson, J. Holsanova, K. Holmqvist
 Practice eliminates "looking at nothing" A. Scholz, K. Mehlhorn, J.F. Krems
 Learning Perceptual Skills for Medical Diagnosis via Eye Movement  Modeling Examples on Patient Video Cases H. Jarodzka, T. Balslev, K. Holmqvist, K. Scheiter, M. Nyström, P. Gerjets, B. Eika
 Objective, subjective, and commercial information: The impact of presentation format on the visual inspection and selection of Web search results Y. Kammerer, P. Gerjets
 Eye Movements and levels of attention: A stimulus driven approach F.B. Mulvey, K. Holmqvist, J.P Hansen
 Player‟s gaze in a collaborative Tetris game P Jermann, M-A Nüssli, W. Li
 Naming associated objects: Evidence for parallel processing L. Mortensen , A.S. Meyer
 Reading Text Messages - An Eye-Tracking Study on the Influence of Shortening Strategies on Reading Comprehension V. Heyer, H. Hopp
 Eye movement measures to study the online comprehension of long (illustrated) texts J. Hyönä, J.K, Kaakinen
 Self-directed Learning Skills in Air-traffic Control; A Cued Retrospective Reporting Study L.W. van Meeuwen, S. Brand-Gruwel, J.J. G. van Merriënboer, J. J.P.R. de Bock, P.A. Kirschner
 Drivers‟ characteristic sequences of eye and head movements in intersections A. Bjelkemyr, K. Smith
 Comparing the value of different cues when using the retrospective think aloud method in web usability testing with eye tracking A. Olsen
 Gaze behavior and instruction sensitivity of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders when viewing pictures of social scenes B. Rudsengen, F. Volden
 Impact of cognitive workload on gaze-including interaction S. Trösterer, J. Dzaack
 Interaction with mainstream interfaces using gaze alone H. Skovsgaard, J. P. Hansen, J.C. Mateo
 Stereoscopic Eye Movement Tracking: Challenges and Opportunities in 3D G. Öqvist Seimyr, A. Appelholm, H. Johansson R. Brautaset
 Sampling frequency – what speed do I need? R. Andersson, M. Nyström, K. Holmqvist
 Effect of head-distance on raw gaze velocity M-A Nüssli, P. Jermann
 Quantifying and modelling factors that influence calibration and data quality M. Nyström, R. Andersson,  J. van de Weijer

Monday, April 12, 2010

Eye tracking in the wild: Consumer decision-making process at the supermarket

Kerstin Gidlöf from the Lund University Humlab talks about the visual appearance of consumer products in the supermarket and how the graphical layout modulates our attention. Perhaps the free will is just an illusion, however number of items in my fridge containing faces equals zero. Is it me or the store I'm shopping at?

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Scandinavian Workshop on Applied Eye-tracking (SWAET) 2010.

The first call for papers for the annual Scandinavian Workshop on Applied Eye-Tracking (SWAET) organized by Kenneth Holmqvist and the team at the Lund University Humanities laboratory was just announced. The SWAET 2010 will be held in Lund, Sweden between May 5-7th. The invited speaker is Gerry Altmann (blog) from the Dept. of Psychology at University of York, UK and Ignace Hooge (s1, s2) from the Dept. of Psychology at Utrecht University, Holland.

Visit the SWAET website for more information.

Update: Download the abstracts (pdf, 1Mb)

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Lund Eye-Tracking Academy (LETA)

Kenneth Holmqvist and his team at the Humanities Lab at Lund University, Sweden will host another three day long LETA training course in eye tracking and analysis of eye movement data. This is an excellent opportunity to get hands-on experience using state-of-the art equipment and setting up experiments. The course is held between 23rd-25th September and the registration is open.

Course contents
• Pro and cons of headmounted, remote and contact eye-trackers.
• High sampling speed and detailed precision – who needs it?
• Gaze-overlaid videos vs datafiles – what can you do with them?
• How to set up and calibrate on a variety of subjects on different eye-trackers?
• Glasses, lenses, mascara, and drooping eye-lids – what to do?
• How to work with stimulus programs, and synchronize them with eye-tracking recording?
• How to deal with the consent forms and ethical issues?
• Short introduction to experimental design: Potentials and pitfalls.
• Visualisation of data vs number crunching.
• Fast data analysis of multi-user experiments.
• Fixation durations, saccadic amplitudes, transition diagrams, group similarity measures, and all the other measures – what do they tell us? What are the pitfalls?

Teaching methods
Lectures on selected topics (8h)
Hands-on work in our lab on prespecified experiments: Receiving and recording on a subject (9h). Handson initial data analysis (3h).

Eye-tracking systems available for this training
2*SMI HED 50 Hz with Polhemus Head-tracking
3*SMI HiSpeed 240/1250 Hz
1*SMI RED-X remote 50 Hz
2*SMI HED-mobile 50/200 Hz

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Lund Eye Tracking Acadamy

From the Lund Eye Tracking Academy (LETA) comes an excellent text on the more practical aspects of eye tracking in research settings.

"This text is about how to record good quality eye-tracking data from commercially available video-oculographic eye-tracking system, and how to derive and use the measures that an eye-tracker can give. The ambition is to cover as many as possible of the measures used in science and applied research. The need for a guide on how to use eye-tracking data has grown during the past years, as an effect of increasing interest in eye-tracking research. Due to the versatility of new measurement techniques and the important role of human vision in all walks of life, eye-tracking is now used in reading research, neurology, advertisement studies, psycholinguistics, human factors, usability studies, scene perception, and many other fields "

Download the document (PDF, 93 pages, 19Mb)

Monday, April 28, 2008

SWAET Conference

The first day of the SWAET 2008 conference at Lund University was filled with interesting presentations and inspiring conversations. Finally I had a chance to meet some of the researchers that I´ve know mainly by their publications and last names.

From the schedule of day one three talks stand out in the field of gaze interaction. These are recorded on video with the intention of future online distribution. For now enjoy these papers.
The conference was attended by three manufacturers, SMI, SmartEye and Tobii which all had systems on display.

The SMI system demonstrated was brought up from the dark dungeons of the lab to host the prototype I have been working on for the last couple of months. In general, it was well received and served its purpose of a eye catching demonstration of my "next-gen" gaze interface. To sum up it was great to get out there to gather feedback confirming that I´m on the right track. (doubts sometimes rise when working solo) The day ended with a a lovely dinner at the university´s finest dining hall.

Big thank you goes out to Kenneth Holmqvist, Jana Holsanova, Philip Diderichsen, Nils Holmberg, Richard Andersson and Janna Spanne for hosting this event.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Day One - Introduction

Today I met up with Kenneth Holmqvist who is the laboratory director of the HumLab at Lund Universtity. Kenneth, who have a long experience in the field, held a course last semester in Eye Tracking Methodology in which I participated as a part of my Masters in Cognitive Science at Lund University

The HumLab, or Humanities Laboratory, is located in the new language and litterature center which was build just a few years ago. The facilities certainly are top-notch. Modern Scandinavian design, high quality materials and have a high technical standard (wireless internet access, access control, perfect climate and air)

The laboratory matches this standard by providing Lund University with advanced technical solutions and expertise. A range of studies takes place here. A perfect home for someone into cognitive sciences including psychology, linguistics and why not Human-Computer Interaction.

My background lies in software development which I previously studied at the Department of Informatics, where I completed a BA in Software Design/Construction. My interest in Cognitive Science and Human Computer Interaction was developed during an EAP exchange to University of California, San Diego in 2006-2007. The blend of Cognition and Neuroscience, understanding of the bits and bolts that enables our perception and behavior combined with novel interface technology and interaction methods is a extremely interesting field. Many thanks to the cog.sci. faculty at UCSD for inspiring classes (Hollan, Boyle, Sereno, Chiba)

Kenneth have pratical experience with a range of eye trackers, they do come in many shapes. (head mounted, high speed, remote) all of which are present in the HumLab. He demonstrated a brand new SMI IView RED remote system connected to a powerful Windows XP machine. This is the setup that I will develop a Gaze Interaction Interface on.

Day one was far from over, lets get started in another post..