Title
Eye tracking: empirical foundations for a minimal reporting guideline
Author
Holmqvist, K.
Örbom, S.L.
Hooge, I.T.C.
Niehorster, D.
Alexander, R.
Benjamins, J.S.
Blignaut, P.
Brouwer, A.M.
Chuang, L.
Dalrymple, K.A.
Drieghe, D.
Dunn, M.J.
Ettinger, U.
Fiedler, S.
Foulsham, T.
van der Geest, J.N.
Hansen, D.W.
Hutton, S.B.
Kasneci, E.
Kingstone, A.
Knox, P.C.
Kok, E.M.
Lee, H.
Lee, J.Y.
Leppänen, J.M.
Macknik, S.
Majaranta, P.
Martinez-Conde, S.
Nuthmann, A.
Nyström, M.
Orquin, J.L.
Otero-Millan, J.
Park, S.Y.
Popelka, S.
Proudlock, F.
Renkewitz, F.
Roorda, A.
Schulte-Mecklenbeck, M.
Sharif, B.
Shic, F.
Shovman, M.
Thomas, M.
Venrooij, W.
Zemblys, R.
Hessels, R.
Publication year
2022
Abstract
In this paper, we present a review of how the various aspects of any study using an eye tracker (such as the instrument, methodology, environment, participant, etc.) affect the quality of the recorded eye-tracking data and the obtained eye-movement and gaze measures. We take this review to represent the empirical foundation for reporting guidelines of any study involving an eye tracker. We compare this empirical foundation to five existing reporting guidelines and to a database of 207 published eye-tracking studies. We find that reporting guidelines vary substantially and do not match with actual reporting practices. We end by deriving a minimal, flexible reporting guideline based on empirical research (Section “An empirically based minimal reporting guideline”). © 2022, The Author(s).
Subject
Data quality
Eye movements
Eye tracking
Replicability
Reporting guidelines
Reporting practices
Reporting standards
Reproducibility
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:d3200854-df59-40fd-92c7-ecabcf744867
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-021-01762-8
TNO identifier
970777
Source
Behavior Research Methods, Epub 6 April
Document type
article