Measuring reading comprehension using eye movements

Leana Copeland, Tom Gedeon

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

    17 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    We investigate eye movement measures and methods for predicting reading comprehension. This builds on previous work on factors affecting reading comprehension, namely perceived familiarity with the text content. We further investigate answer-seeking behavior and present a method for measuring and comparing this behavior. The number of fixations, number of regressions, and total fixation time are an indicator of reading intensity and the intensity of reading is related to comprehension. We show that a feed-forward backpropagation neural network can be used to predict subjective comprehension scores as well as quiz scores. We propose using the degree of answer-seeking behavior to measure how question difficulty and as an implicit measure of how difficult a participant finds a tutorial and quiz. Such information is beneficial to apply in eLearning to create dynamic learning environments that use eye movement to predict implicit question difficulty as well as individual participant difficulty.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publication4th IEEE International Conference on Cognitive Infocommunications, CogInfoCom 2013 - Proceedings
    PublisherIEEE Computer Society
    Pages791-796
    Number of pages6
    ISBN (Print)9781479915439
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013
    Event4th IEEE International Conference on Cognitive Infocommunications, CogInfoCom 2013 - Budapest, Hungary
    Duration: 2 Dec 20135 Dec 2013

    Publication series

    Name4th IEEE International Conference on Cognitive Infocommunications, CogInfoCom 2013 - Proceedings

    Conference

    Conference4th IEEE International Conference on Cognitive Infocommunications, CogInfoCom 2013
    Country/TerritoryHungary
    CityBudapest
    Period2/12/135/12/13

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