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Journal Article

Citation

Di Stasi LL, Diaz-Piedra C. Int. J. Aerosp. Psychol. 2021; 31(2): 122-134.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/24721840.2020.1862658

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To reduce the gap between old and new eye-tracking studies in aviation by raising the interest of the scientific community in some of the pioneering works. We present two emblematic cases: the misattributed origin of the use of eye-tracking techniques in aviation to Paul M. Fitts and his collaborators, and the forgotten (and often reinvented) oculometer training tape technique.

BACKGROUND: Over the last century, military and civilian researchers have used eye-tracking techniques to solve many challenges faced by the aviation industry, from assessing new graphical displays to testing procedural trainings. Yet, these techniques have been always classified as merely promising. The difficulty of using eye trackers outside of a laboratory environment, and the labor-intensive data extraction and interpretation procedures have long been considered a barrier to implementing eye-tracking techniques in aviation settings.

METHOD: We revised original scientific articles as well as military and civilian technical reports on the use of eye-tracking techniques in aviation settings from the beginning of Aviation Psychology.

RESULTS: A systematic failure in recognizing and learning from the pioneering works might be a concomitant explanation for classifying the use of eye-tracking techniques as merely promising.

CONCLUSION: Taking together past and present findings, it would not be over-optimistic to state that eye-tracking finally went from being a "promising" technique in aviation to a "proven" one.


Language: en

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