- 1 BOLT, R. A. Gaze-orchestrated dynamic windows. Comput. Graph. 15, 3 (Aug. 1981), 109-119. Google Scholar
- 2 BOLT, R.A. Eyes at the interface. In Proceedings of the ACM Human Factors in Computer Systems Conference (Gaithersburg, MD, Mar. 15-17, 1982), pp. 360-362. Google Scholar
- 3 BROOKS, F P Grasping reality through illusion-interactive graphics serving science. In Proceedings of the ACM CHI'88 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference (Washington, D.C., May 15-19, 1988), Addison-Wesley/ACM Press, pp. 1-11. Google Scholar
- 4 CARD, S., ENGLISH, W., AND BURR, B. Evaluation of mouse, rate-controlled isometric joystick, step keys, and text keys for text selection on a CRT. Ergonomics 21, 8 (1978), 601-613.Google Scholar
- 5 GLENN, F. A., IAVECCHIA, H. P., ROSS, L. V., STOKES, J. M., WEILAND, W. J., WEISS, D., AND ZAKLAD, A.L. Eye-voice-controlled interface. In Proceedings of the 30th Annual Meeting of the Human Factors Society (Santa Monica, Calif., 1986), pp. 322-326.Google Scholar
- 6 HUTCHINSON, T. E., WHITE, K. P., MARTIN, W. N., REICHERT, K. C., AND FREY, L. A. Human-computer interaction using eye-gaze input. IEEE Trans. Syst. Man and Cybern. 19, 6 (Nov. 1989), 1527-1534.Google Scholar
- 7 JACOB, R. J. K. A specification language for direct manipulation user interfaces. ACM Trans. Graph. 5, 4 (1986), 283-317. Special Issue on User Interface Software. Google Scholar
- 8 JUST, M. A., AND CARPENTER, P.A. A theory of reading: From eye fixations to comprehension. Psychological Rev. 87, 4 (Jul. 1980), 329-354Google Scholar
- 9 LEVINE, J.L. An eye-controlled computer. IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Res. Rep. RC-8857, Yorktown Heights, N.Y., 1981.Google Scholar
- 10 MERCHANT, J., MORRISSETTE, R., AND PORTERFIELD, J. L. Remote measurement of eye direction allowing subject motion over one cubic foot of space. IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. BME-21, 4 (Jul. 1974), 309-317.Google Scholar
- 11 MONT~, R. A., AND SENDERS, J.W. Eye Movements and Psychological Processes. Lawrence Erlbaum, Hillsdale, N.J., 1976.Google Scholar
- 12 MYERS, B.A. User-interface tools: Introduction and survey. IEEE Softw. 6, 1 (Jan. 1989), 15-23. Google Scholar
- 13 SCHMANDT, C , ACKERMAN, M. S., AND HINDUS, D. Augmenting a window system with speech input. IEEE Comput. 23, 8 (Aug. 1990), 50-56. Google Scholar
- 14 STARKER, I., AND BOLT, R. A. A gaze-responsive self-disclosing display. In Proceedings of the ACM CHI'90 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference (Seattle, Wash., Apr. 1-5, 1990), Addison-Wesley/ACM Press, pp. 3-9. Google Scholar
- 15 WARE, C., AND MIKAELIAN, H.T. An evaluation of an eye tracker as a device for computer input. In Proceedings of the ACM CHI + GI'87 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference (Toronto, Canada, Apr. 5-9, 1987), pp. 183-188. Google Scholar
- 16 YOUNG, L. R., AND SHEENA, D. Survey of eye movement recording methods. Behav. Res. Meth. Instrument. 7, 5 (1975), 397-429.Google Scholar
Index Terms
- The use of eye movements in human-computer interaction techniques: what you look at is what you get
Recommendations
Evaluation of eye gaze interaction
CHI '00: Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human Factors in Computing SystemsEye gaze interaction can provide a convenient and natural addition to user-computer dialogues. We have previously reported on our interaction techniques using eye gaze [10]. While our techniques seemed useful in demonstration, we now investigate their ...
The use of eye movements in human-computer interaction techniques: what you look at is what you get
Readings in intelligent user interfacesEye Tracking in Human-Computer Interaction and Usability Research
INTERACT '09: Proceedings of the 12th IFIP TC 13 International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Part IIThe objective of the tutorial is to give an overview on how eye tracking is currently used and how it can be used as a method in human computer interaction research and especially in usability research. An eye tracking system records how the eyes move ...
Comments