Authors
Diederick C Niehorster, Tim HW Cornelissen, Kenneth Holmqvist, Ignace TC Hooge, Roy S Hessels
Publication date
2018/2
Journal
Behavior research methods
Volume
50
Pages
213-227
Publisher
Springer US
Description
The marketing materials of remote eye-trackers suggest that data quality is invariant to the position and orientation of the participant as long as the eyes of the participant are within the eye-tracker’s headbox, the area where tracking is possible. As such, remote eye-trackers are marketed as allowing the reliable recording of gaze from participant groups that cannot be restrained, such as infants, schoolchildren and patients with muscular or brain disorders. Practical experience and previous research, however, tells us that eye-tracking data quality, e.g. the accuracy of the recorded gaze position and the amount of data loss, deteriorates (compared to well-trained participants in chinrests) when the participant is unrestrained and assumes a non-optimal pose in front of the eye-tracker. How then can researchers working with unrestrained participants choose an eye-tracker? Here we investigated the performance …
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Scholar articles
DC Niehorster, THW Cornelissen, K Holmqvist… - Behavior research methods, 2018