Abstract

Mind-wandering has been shown to largely influence our learning efficiency, especially in the digital and distracting era nowadays. Detecting mind-wandering thus becomes imperative in educational scenarios. Here, we used a wearable eye-tracker to record eye movements during the sustained attention to response task. Eye movement analysis with hidden Markov models (EMHMM), which takes both spatial and temporal eye-movement information into account, was used to examine if participants’ eye movement patterns can differentiate between the states of focused attention and mind-wandering. Two representative eye movement patterns were discovered through clustering using EMHMM: centralized and distributed patterns. Results showed that participants with the centralized pattern had better performance on detecting targets and rated themselves as more focused than those with the distributed pattern. This study indicates that distinct eye movement patterns are associated with different attentional states (focused attention vs. mind-wandering) and demonstrates a novel approach in using EMHMM to study attention. Moreover, this study provides a potential approach to capture the mind-wandering state in the classroom without interrupting the ongoing learning behavior.

Highlights

  • Mind-wandering (MW), the shift of attention from the current task to task-unrelated thoughts, is a universal experience that occupies 47% of adults’ daily thinking time [1]

  • To evaluate if the centralized pattern is different from the distributed pattern, we calculated the mean log-likelihoods of the fixation sequences from the distributed pattern using the distributed and the centralized HMMs

  • Centralized participants’ fixation sequences were more likely to be generated by the centralized HMM than the distributed HMM, t(14) = 7.63, p < 0.001

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Summary

Introduction

Mind-wandering (MW), the shift of attention from the current task to task-unrelated thoughts, is a universal experience that occupies 47% of adults’ daily thinking time [1]. We live in an era full of distractions where modern technology and social media have become a pervasive part of our lives. The increase of distractions has caused people to have more difficulty in concentrating on tasks. MW is negatively correlated with task performance. Stothart et al [5] showed that cellphone notifications disrupted task performance in an attention demanding task, even when participants did not check their phones. Understanding when and what kind of people tend to mind-wander is a critical issue in modern society [11]

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