Litcius/Paper detail

Supporting Complex Decision-Making: Evidence from an Eye Tracking Study on In-Person and Remote Collaboration

Katarzyna Wisiecka, Yuumi Konishi, Krzysztof Krejtz, Mahshid Zolfaghari, Birgit Kopainsky, Izabela Krejtz, Hideki Koike, Morten Fjeld

2023ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article examines the attentional mechanism of in-person collaboration by means of System Dynamics-based simulations using an eye tracking experiment. Three experimental conditions were tested: in-person collaboration, remote collaboration, and single user. We hypothesized that collaboration focuses users’ attention on key information facilitating decision-making. Collaborating participants dwelt longer on key elements of the simulation than single users. Moreover, in-person collaboration and single users yielded a strategy of decision-making similar to an optimal strategy. Finally, in-person collaboration was less cognitively demanding and of higher quality. The contribution of this article is a deeper understanding of how in-person collaboration on a large display can help users focus their visual attention on the most important areas. With this novel understanding, we believe collaborative systems designers will be better equipped to design more effective attention-guiding mechanisms in remote collaboration systems. The present work has the potential to advance the study of collaborative, interactive technologies.

Topics & Concepts

Key (lock)Eye trackingComputer scienceHuman–computer interactionQuality (philosophy)Focus (optics)Tracking (education)Knowledge managementMultimediaPsychologyArtificial intelligenceComputer securityEpistemologyPhysicsPedagogyPhilosophyOpticsData Visualization and AnalyticsVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsPersonal Information Management and User Behavior