Tag Archives: eye tracking

Beyond heatmaps: visualizing eye tracking data

Eye tracking data is notoriously hard to represent visually. It’s dense, high dimensional, and can’t be compressed without losing important information. The industry standard graphic, a heatmap of the combined tracks of all participants in a study, does a good … Continue reading

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Where do users look first?

Where do your users look first? Most people running a web site have asked themselves this question at some point. It’s a good question to ask: capturing a user’s attention and steering him or her towards the important areas of … Continue reading

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Experienced users view Reddit differently

Everyone at GazeHawk loves reddit, so we decided to run a study tracking the eye movement of people looking at reddit. Here’s how it worked: we recorded the (x, y) coordinates of where our study participants looked while checking out … Continue reading

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How do people look at Apple’s movie trailers page?

Two weeks ago, we started an eye-tracking study of Apple’s iTunes movie trailers site. Originally, we had hoped to do a demographic breakdown of the study results — what posters did men like, what posters did women like, that sort of … Continue reading

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Don’t get burned by heatmaps

Eye tracking companies, including GazeHawk, frequently use heatmaps to present the results of a study to customers. The reason for this is simple: heatmaps instantly communicate where study participants looked and for how long. They tell you the hot spots … Continue reading

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Eye Tracking vs. Mouse Tracking

When explaining GazeHawk to people we often hear comparisons to “mouse tracking” services that track where the mouse moves on a page. It’s a reasonable comparison: both technologies build heatmaps as a main visualization. However, just because they use the … Continue reading

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