Evaluating eye tracking with ISO 9241 - part 9

  • Authors:
  • Xuan Zhang;I. Scott MacKenzie

  • Affiliations:
  • Department of Computer Science and Engineering, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;Department of Computer Science and Engineering, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

  • Venue:
  • HCI'07 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Human-computer interaction: intelligent multimodal interaction environments
  • Year:
  • 2007

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Abstract

The ISO 9241-9 standard for computer pointing devices proposes an evaluation of performance and comfort [4]. This paper is the first eye tracking evaluation conforming to ISO 9241-9. We evaluated three techniques and compared them with a standard mouse. The evaluation used throughput (in bits/s) as a measurement of user performance in a multi-directional point-select task. The "Eye Tracking Long" technique required participants to look at an on-screen target and dwell on it for 750 ms for selection. Results revealed a lower throughput than for the "Eye Tracking Short" technique with a 500 ms dwell time. The "Eye+Spacebar" technique allowed participants to "point" with the eye and "select" by pressing the spacebar upon fixation. This eliminated the need to wait for selection. It was the best among the three eye tracking techniques with a throughput of 3.78 bits/s, which was close to the 4.68 bits/s for the mouse.