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Authors

Mauro CherubiniTelefonica Research, Barcelona
Marc-Antoine NüssliSwiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne
Pierre DillenbourgSwiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne

Abstract

Little is known of the interplay between deixis and eye movements in remote collaboration. This paper presents quantitative results from an experiment where participant pairs had to collaborate at a distance using chat tools that differed in
the way messages could be enriched with spatial information from the map in the shared workspace. We studied how the availability of what we defined as an Explicit Referencing mechanism (ER) affected the coordination of the eye movements of the participants. The manipulation of the availability of ER did not produce any significant difference on the gaze coupling. However, we found a primary relation between the pairs recurrence of eye movements and their task performance. Implications for design are discussed.

About this article

History

Received: June 16, .2010, revised: November 24, 2010
Published: December 9, 2010

Citation

Cherubini, M., Nüssli, M-A., & Dillenbourg, P. (2010). Indicating and looking in collaborative work at distance. Journal of Eye Movement Research 3(5):3, 1–205.

>> www.jemr.org/online/3/5/3

Keywords

Computer-mediated communication

computer-supported cooperative work

eye tracking

focus of attention

human factors

collaborative tasks