Objective: With the increasing amount of information presented on current human–computer interfaces, eye-controlled highlighting has been proposed, as a new display technique, to optimise users’ task performances. However, it is unknown to what extent the eye-controlled highlighting display facilitates visual search performance. The current study examined the facilitative effect of eye-controlled highlighting display technique on visual search with two major attributes of visual stimuli: stimulus type and the visual similarity between targets and distractors. Method: In Experiment 1, we used digits and Chinese words as materials to explore the generalisation of the facilitative effect of the eye-controlled highlighting. In Experiment 2, we used Chinese words to examine the effect of target-distractor similarity on the facilitation of eye-controlled highlighting display. Results: The eye-controlling highlighting display improved visual search performance when words were used as searching target and when the target-distractor similarity was high. No facilitative effect was found when digits were used as searching target or target-distractor similarity was low. Conclusions: The effectiveness of the eye-controlled highlighting on a visual task was influenced by both stimulus type and target-distractor similarity. These findings provided guidelines for modern interface design with eye-based displays implemented.
CITATION STYLE
Wang, Q., Sun, M., Liu, H., Pan, Y., Wang, L., & Ge, L. (2018). The applicability of eye-controlled highlighting to the field of visual searching. Australian Journal of Psychology, 70(3), 294–301. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajpy.12200
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