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Authors

Aulikki HyrskykariUniversity of Tampere
Saila OvaskaUniversity of Tampere
Päivi MajarantaUniversity of Tampere
Kari-Jouko RäihäUniversity of Tampere
Merja LehtinenUniversity of Tampere

Abstract

For a long time, eye tracking has been thought of as a promising method for usability testing. During the last couple of years, eye tracking has finally started to live up to these
expectations, at least in terms of its use in usability laboratories. We know that the user’s gaze path can reveal usability issues that would otherwise go unnoticed, but a common understanding of how best to make use of eye movement data has not been reached. Many usability practitioners seem to have intuitively started to use gaze path replays to stimulate recall for retrospective walk through of the usability test. We review the research on thinkaloud protocols in usability testing and the use of eye tracking in the context of usability evaluation. We also report our own experiment in which we compared the standard, concurrent think-aloud method with the gaze path stimulated retrospective think-aloud method. Our results suggest that the gaze path stimulated retrospective think-aloud method produces more verbal data, and that the data are more informative and of better quality as the drawbacks of concurrent think-aloud have been avoided.

About this article

History

Received: 18.12.2007
Published: 26.11.2008

Citation

Hyrskykari, A. & Ovaska, S., Majaranta, P., Räihä, K.-J. & Lehtinen, M. (2008). Gaze Path Stimulation in Retrospective Think-Aloud. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 2(4):5, 1-18.

Keywords

Think-aloud protocol

gaze path stimulated retrospective think-aloud

usability testing