Attentional Drift: An Exploratory Study into the Development of an Attention Level Monitoring System Based on Human Eye Fixation

Abstract

This study was designed to determine if future research into the development of an attention monitoring device based on eye fixation duration is both feasible and warranted. Attentional Drift is an insidious form of distraction where primary task attention is slowly eroded by secondary tasking. It most often occurs in very low or very high cognitive demand situations. Recent studies have shown that eye fixation duration and glance duration measures are related to attentional demand in visual tasks. In this study, participants completed two 20-minute driving periods in a STISIM II (trademark) simulator wearing a head-mounted eye-tracking system. Eye fixation measures recorded in a single-task low mental demand test did not show an expected increase in eye fixation duration over time in all but a few participants. A second test incorporating dual tasking through conversation did show that eye fixation duration values were affected by the added cognitive workload. Eye fixation measures showed statistically significant changes in duration as a direct result of varying secondary cognitive demand. It is concluded that further experimentation with significantly lengthened test runs incorporating an eye blink rate factor, a gaze dwell time function, and a fixed-base eye-tracking system is both feasible and warranted.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 01, 2010
Accession Number
ADA518630

Entities

People

  • Douglas M. Magedman

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Workload
  • Computers
  • Data Analysis
  • Dwell Time
  • Human Factors Engineering
  • Human Systems Integration
  • Human-Machine Interaction
  • Information Science
  • Mobile Phones
  • Psychology
  • Simulations
  • Simulators
  • Students
  • Task Performance And Analysis
  • Workload

Readers

  • Aviation Science / Aeronautics.
  • Brain and Cognitive Science; Experimental Psychology; Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Vision Science/Vision Psychology/Cognitive Neuroscience.