ARTICLE
TITLE

Eye Movement Patterns in Solving Science Ordering Problems

SUMMARY

Dynamic biological processes, such as intracellular signaling pathways, commonly are taught in science courses using static representations of individual steps in the pathway. As a result, students often memorize these steps for examination purposes, but fail to appreciate either the cascade nature of the pathway. In this study, we compared eye movement patterns for students who correctly ordered the components of an important pathway responsible for vasoconstriction against those who did not. Similarly, we compared the patterns of students who learned the material using three dimensional (3-D) animations previously associated with improved student understanding of this pathway against those who learned the material using static images extracted from those animations. For two of the three ordering problems, students with higher scores had shorter total fixation duration when ordering the components and spent less time (fixating) in the planning and solving phases of the problem-solving process. This finding was supported by the scanpath patterns that demonstrated that students who correctly solved the problems used more efficient problem-solving strategies.

 Articles related

Lilla Magyari, Anne Mangen, Anežka Kuzmicová, Arthur M Jacobs, Jana Lüdtke    

Based on Kuzmicová’s (2014) phenomenological typology of narrative styles, we studied the specific contributions of mental imagery to literary reading experience and to reading behavior by combining questionnaires with eye-tracking methodology. Specifica... see more


Xi Fan, Ronan Reilly    

This paper describes the use of semantic similarity measures based on distributed representations of words, sentences, and paragraphs (so-called“embeddings”) to assess the impact of supra-lexical factors on eye movement data from early readers of Chinese... see more


Susana Martinez-Conde, Bradley Buchsbaum, Fatema Ghasia, Freek van Ede, Stephen L. Macknik    

Video stream: https://vimeo.com/365522806The human ability for visualization extends far beyond the physical items that surround us. We are able to dismiss the constant influx of photons hitting our retinas, and instead picture the layout of our kinderga... see more


Alexandra Spichtig, Christian Vorstius, Ronan Reilly, Jochen Laubrock    

Video stream: https://vimeo.com/362645755Eye-movement recording has made it possible to achieve a detailed understanding of oculomotor and cognitive behavior during reading and of changes in this behavior across the stages of reading development. Gi... see more


Ignace T.C. Hooge, Roy S. Hessels, Diederick C, Niehorster, Gabriel J. Diaz, Andrew T. Duchowski, Jeff B. Pelz    

Video stream: https://vimeo.com/357473408Wearable mobile eye trackers have great potential as they allow the measurement of eye movements during daily activities such as driving, navigating the world and doing groceries. Although mobile eye trackers... see more