ThesaHelp: references i-l
ThesaHelp: ACM references f-l
Topic: eye gaze as a pointing device
Topic: current position in a user interface; cursor
Topic: interactive response time
Topic: dragging with a mouse
Topic: keystroke shortcuts as a UserInterface
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Reference
Jacob, R.J.K.,
"What you look at is what you get: Eye movement-based interaction techniques",
Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Computer- Human Interaction, April 1990, pp. 11-18.
Google
Other Reference
Jacob, R.J.K., "The use of eye movements in human-computer interaction techniques: What you look at is what you get," ACM Trans. Information Systems, 9.3:152-169 April 1991
Quotations
12 ;;Quote: eye gaze is not effective for directly controlling the cursor; people want to look without meaning something
| 12 ;;Quote: if eye gaze activates commands, it is like the Midas Touch; difficult to distinguish just looking and button pushing
| 13 ;;Quote: using an eye tracker is disconcerting; like being watched
| 13 ;;Quote: should treat eye position as a useful piece of information, but not for intentional action
| 15 ;;Quote: found eye gaze effective for displaying information relevant to an object; used 150-250 ms. dwell time
| 16 ;;Quote: can effectively drag an object with eye gaze; was subjectively instantaneous; hard to drag to a blank spot
| 17 ;;Quote: can select commands with eye gaze if use a 1 sec. dwell time; but more convenient to use a button
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Related Topics
ThesaHelp: references i-l (342 items)
ThesaHelp: ACM references f-l (241 items)
Topic: eye gaze as a pointing device (7 items)
Topic: current position in a user interface; cursor (23 items)
Topic: interactive response time (32 items)
Topic: dragging with a mouse (17 items)
Topic: keystroke shortcuts as a UserInterface (22 items)
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