Welcome to Central Library, SUST

Eye Gaze in Intelligent User Interfaces

Eye Gaze in Intelligent User Interfaces Gaze-based Analyses, Models and Applications / [electronic resource] : edited by Yukiko I. Nakano, Cristina Conati, Thomas Bader. - X, 207 p. 84 illus., 71 illus. in color. online resource.

Preface -- Introduction -- Part I: Gaze in Human Communication -- How Eye Gaze Feedback Changes Parent-child Joint Attention in Shared Storybook Reading: An Eye-tracking Intervention Study -- Shared Gaze in Situated Referential Grounding: An Empirical Study -- Automated Analysis of Mutual Gaze in Human Conversational Pairs -- Part II: Gaze-based Cognitive and Communicative Status Estimation -- REGARD: Remote Gaze-Aware Reference Detector -- Effectiveness of Gaze-based Engagement Estimation in Conversational Agents -- A Computational Approach for Prediction of Problem-solving Behavior using Support Vector Machines and Eye-tracking Data -- Part III: Gaze Awareness in HCI -- Gazing the Text for Fun and Profit -- Natural Gaze Behavior as Input Modality for Human-Computer Interaction -- Co-present or Not?: Embodiment, Situatedness and the Mona Lisa Gaze Effect -- Index.

Remarkable progress in eye-tracking technologies opened the way to design novel attention-based intelligent user interfaces, and highlighted the importance of better understanding of eye-gaze in human-computer interaction and human-human communication. For instance, a user’s focus of attention is useful in interpreting the user’s intentions, their understanding of the conversation, and their attitude towards the conversation. In human face-to-face communication, eye gaze plays an important role in floor management, grounding, and engagement in conversation. Eye Gaze in Intelligent User Interfaces draws on ideas from a number of contributors working on how attentional information can be applied to novel intelligent interfaces. Part I focuses on analyzing human eye gaze behaviors to reveal characteristics of human communication and cognition; Part II addresses estimation and prediction of the cognitive state of the users using gaze information; and Part III presents proposals of novel gaze-aware interfaces which integrate eye-trackers as a system component. The contributions highlight a direction for the future of human-computer interaction, and discuss issues in human attentional behaviors and face-to-face communication which are essential in designing gaze aware interactive interfaces.

9781447147848

10.1007/978-1-4471-4784-8 doi


Computer science.
Multimedia information systems.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Computer graphics.
Application software.
Education--Data processing.
Computer Science.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences.
Computers and Education.
Computer Imaging, Vision, Pattern Recognition and Graphics.
Multimedia Information Systems.

QA76.9.U83 QA76.9.H85

005.437 4.019