This short video illustrates eye-gaze tracking with the Mirametrix S1 Eye tracker while searching for a Microsoft MSN causal game to play. Eventually the top MSN game Bubble Town was selected.
Eye-tracking has great potential as a tool in the evaluation of game design. Knowing where a player looks and doesn't look provides excellent feedback on improving the playability of a game. Game developers can see their games literally from the eyes of their users.
Using the Mirametrix S1 Eye-tracker to track gaze position and the Viewer application for gaze overlay and screen recording, it is possible to tell exactly where the user's attention was at all times during game play. See our website for more information on how we can help you improve your products: http://mirametrix.com
The eye-gaze position is shown in red, the mouse position in green, left mouse clicks in blue and right mouse clicks in yellow. The size of the red circle is proportional to the duration of the fixation (stable point-of-gaze). Fixations are connected by a red line (saccades or quick jumps of the eyes).
The brain typically processes information only when the eye is fixating, so fixations are a good indication of where the users cognitive processing (thinking) is taking place. The peripheral vision can provide queues on where to look next in the game, which the eye then jumps to with a fast saccade, to view with the fovea or high resolution part of the eye for a detailed look. During a saccade the visual system is suppressed and the user doesn't "see" anything until the eye slows down, as the image on the eye is blurred with motion.
how do u make ur mouse go like this?
habibshady 1 year ago