Print Email Facebook Twitter Using eye tracker data in air traffic control Title Using eye tracker data in air traffic control Author Imants, P. de Greef, T. Publication year 2011 Abstract Motivation/Research approach - An exploratory study was conducted to investigate whether eye movement metrics discriminate between different air traffic control tasks. Findings/Design - The results show the three tasks elicit different eye movement, as Yarbus (1967) also showed in static pictures, and that a number of eye tracking metrics demonstrate the differences. Research limitations/Implications - The effect was demonstrated using only one participant. The results can be used to further study various eye movement metrics. Originality/Value - The research demonstrates that different calculus distinguishes between tasks allowing targeting specific support given the type of task. Take away message - A combination of eye tracker metrics discriminates between tasks helping to provide flexible task support. © 2011 Authors. Subject HumanPCS - Perceptual and Cognitive SystemsBSS - Behavioural and Societal SciencesDefence, Safety and Securityadaptive automationair traffic controleye tracking datafixationsscan-path To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:0e0a0e6b-dd51-40bc-add0-158e62cfe4dd DOI https://doi.org/10.1145/2074712.2074769 TNO identifier 445692 ISBN 9783860091135 Source 29th European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics, ECCE 2011, 24 August 2011 through 26 August 2011, Rostock, 259-260 Document type conference paper Files To receive the publication files, please send an e-mail request to TNO Library.