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How Students Learn using MOOCs: An Eye-tracking Insight

Publications associées (38)

Dual Eye-Tracking: Lessons Learnt

Pierre Dillenbourg, Patrick Jermann, Kshitij Sharma

Dual eye-tracking (DUET) is at the confluents of cognitive (and social) psychology and computer science. DUET is a novel methodology to explore the socio-cognitive processes underlying collaboration. The basic aims of DUET are to better understand, through ...
2013

Integration of Eye-tracking Methods in Visual Comfort Assessments

Marilyne Andersen, Mandana Sarey Khanie

Discomfort glare, among different aspects of visual discomfort is a phenomenon which is little understood and hard to quantify. As this phenomenon is dependent on the building occupant’s view direction and on the relative position of the glare source, a de ...
2011

Towards a model for View Direction patterns as a function of light distribution

Mandana Sarey Khanie

DAYLIGHT is a desirable architectural component that satisfies both visual and psychological needs of the occupants. Therefore it is essential to integrate this component in the design in a way that maximum daylight is guaranteed and a visually healthy and ...
2011

Producing and Reading Annotations on Paper Documents: a geometrical framework for eye-tracking studies

Pierre Dillenbourg, Frédéric Kaplan, Andrea Mazzei

The printed textbook remains the primary medium for studying in educational systems. Learners use personal annotation strategies while reading. These practices play an important role in supporting working memory, enhancing recall and influencing attentiona ...
2011

Dual Eye-Tracking Methods for the Study of Remote Collaborative Problem Solving

Marc-Antoine Nüssli

Applied eye-tracking has been extensively used for the study of psychological processes. More recently, some researchers have used this technique to study the interaction between people by tracking and analyzing eye-movements of two persons synchronously. ...
EPFL2011

Motion and tilt aftereffects occur largely in retinal, not in object, coordinates in the Ternus-Pikler display

Michael Herzog, Marco Boi

Recent studies have shown that a variety of aftereffects occurs in a non-retinotopic frame of reference. These findings have been taken as strong evidence that remapping of visual information occurs in a hierarchic manner in the human cortex with an increa ...
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology2011

Preference is biased by crowded facial expressions

Nathan Quentin Faivre

Crowding occurs when nearby flankers impede the identification of a peripheral stimulus. Here, we studied whether crowded features containing inaccessible emotional information can nevertheless affect preference judgments. We relied on gaze-contingent crow ...
2011

This is it ! : Indicating and looking in collaborative work at distance

Pierre Dillenbourg, Marc-Antoine Nüssli, Mauro Cherubini

Little is known of the interplay between deixis and eye movements in remote collaboration. This paper presents quantitative results from an experiment where participant pairs had to collaborate at a distance using chat tools that differed in the way messag ...
2010

Eye fixation-related potentials in change detection

Gijs Plomp

We considered the hypothesis that spontaneous dissociation between the direction of attention and eye movement causes encoding failure in change detection. We tested this hypothesis by analyzing eye fixation-related potentials (EFRP) at the encoding stage ...
2010

Gaze quality assisted automatic recognition of social contexts in collaborative Tetris

Patrick Jermann, Weifeng Li, Marc-Antoine Nüssli

The use of dual eye-tracking is investigated in a collabora- tive game setting. Social context influences individual gaze and action during a collaborative Tetris game: results show that experts as well as novices adapt their playing style when interacting ...
2010

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