Comparing infrared and webcam eye tracking in the Visual World Paradigm
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28001Date
2022-08-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Visual World eye tracking is a temporally fine-grained method of monitoring attention, making it a popular tool in the study of online sentence processing. Recently, while infrared eye tracking was mostly unavailable, various web-based experiment platforms have rapidly developed webcam eye tracking functionalities, which are now in urgent need of testing and evaluation. We replicated a recent Visual World study on the incremental processing of verb aspect in English using ‘out of the box’ webcam eye tracking software (jsPsych; de Leeuw, 2015) and crowdsourced participants, and fully replicated both the offline and online results of the original study. We furthermore discuss factors influencing the quality and interpretability of webcam eye tracking data, particularly with regards to temporal and spatial resolution; and conclude that remote webcam eye tracking can serve as an affordable and accessible alternative to lab-based infrared eye tracking, even for questions probing the time-course of language processing.
Publisher
University of California PressCitation
Vos MT, Minor S, Ramchand GC. Comparing infrared and webcam eye tracking in the Visual World Paradigm. Glossa Psycholinguistics. 2022;1(1):1-37Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2022 The Author(s)