Abstract

This chapter discusses the application of eye movements to user interfaces, both for analyzing interfaces (measuring usability) and as an actual control medium within a human–computer dialogue. For usability analysis, the user's eye movements are recorded during system use and later analyzed retrospectively; however, the eye movements do not affect the interface in real time. As a direct control medium, the eye movements are obtained and used in real time as an input to the user–computer dialogue. The eye movements might be the sole input, typically for disabled users or hands-busy applications, or might be used as one of several inputs, combining with mouse, keyboard, sensors, or other devices. From the perspective of mainstream eye-movement research, human–computer interaction, together with related work in the broader field of communications and media research, appears as a new and very promising area of applied work. Both basic and applied work can profit from integration within a unified field of eye­-movement research. Application of eye tracking in human–computer interaction remains a very promising approach; its technological and market barriers are finally being reduced.

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