Predicting Visual Search Task Success from Eye Gaze Data as a Basis for User-Adaptive Information Visualization Systems

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Abstract

Information visualizations are an efficient means to support the users in understanding large amounts of complex, interconnected data; user comprehension, however, depends on individual factors such as their cognitive abilities. The research literature provides evidence that user-adaptive information visualizations positively impact the users' performance in visualization tasks. This study attempts to contribute toward the development of a computational model to predict the users' success in visual search tasks from eye gaze data and thereby drive such user-adaptive systems. State-of-the-art deep learning models for time series classification have been trained on sequential eye gaze data obtained from 40 study participants' interaction with a circular and an organizational graph. The results suggest that such models yield higher accuracy than a baseline classifier and previously used models for this purpose. In particular, a Multivariate Long Short Term Memory Fully Convolutional Network shows encouraging performance for its use in online user-adaptive systems. Given this finding, such a computational model can infer the users' need for support during interaction with a graph and trigger appropriate interventions in user-adaptive information visualization systems. This facilitates the design of such systems since further interaction data like mouse clicks is not required.

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Spiller, M., Liu, Y. H., Hossain, M. Z., Gedeon, T., Geissler, J., & Nürnberger, A. (2021). Predicting Visual Search Task Success from Eye Gaze Data as a Basis for User-Adaptive Information Visualization Systems. ACM Transactions on Interactive Intelligent Systems, 11(2). https://doi.org/10.1145/3446638

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