Finding the Way at Kraków Główny Railway Station: Preliminary Eye Tracker Experiment

Author(s):  
Anton Pashkevich ◽  
Eduard Bairamov ◽  
Tomasz E. Burghardt ◽  
Matus Sucha
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Anton Pashkevich ◽  
Eduard Bairamov ◽  
Marcin J. Kłos ◽  
Tomasz E. Burghardt ◽  
Matúš Šucha
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 49 ◽  
pp. 00092
Author(s):  
Marta Rusnak ◽  
Joanna Szewczyk

The paper concentrates on the application of an eye tracker as a tool used to evaluate the successfulness of transformations of various historic monuments for modern purposes. An eye tracker as a device capable of registering the path of one’s gaze makes it possible to analyze the way in which people perceive a given architectural object - in the case of this paper it is the former Dresden Arsenal, now known as the Bundeswehr Military History Museum. Since Daniel Libeskind, the architect behind the transformation, clearly defined the impression he what to achieve and the building provokes significant controversies, it was decided that it would be a suitable object for such a study. The survey was meant to find out whether the changes introduced by Libeskind actually helped him achieve the intended goal. The participants of the survey were shown images of the Arsenal’s façade from before the transformation, after the transformation in the daytime and after the transformation, but at night, with the illumination turned on. The paper not only shows and analyzes differences in the way people perceive these three images, but also raises a question as to the potential of eye trackers as tools used in architectural research.


Architects ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 15-18
Author(s):  
Thomas Yarrow

Tomas picks me up from Stroud railway station to take me to the office of Millar Howard Workshop (MHW), where his architectural practice is based. It’s the first hot day of the year; suddenly summer is here. On the way we tour through the center of town. Victorian buildings have a faded grandeur hearkening back to the town’s heyday when the woolen industry brought prosperity to Stroud. Boarded-up storefronts, charity shops, and discount stores sit next to high street chains. Though Stroud is in the Cotswolds, a place synonymous with an English pastoral idyll, it is not quite of it. We proceed along the valley bottom, following the railway, the canal, and the stream, the infrastructure of a nineteenth-century economy of a bygone era. The woolen mills closed long ago; some factory buildings remain derelict while others have been converted to serve an economy that now revolves around services, retail, and small-scale manufacturing: garages, a bike shop, a craft brewery, artists’ studios, some light engineering. The money now resides in the surrounding villages, whose population of retirees and commuters is growing, a wealthy demographic from which most of Tomas’s clients are drawn....


Leonardo ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert ◽  
Omiros Panayides

Tracking the Loving Gaze is a futile attempt to follow, map and capture the way cherished personal photographs are viewed. The authors asked 30 people to look at a preselected photograph that held a special meaning for them, while using an eye tracker. The raw visual data from this process---heat maps, focus maps and scan paths---became the foundation of a body of work that includes darkroom prints, short videos and a limited-edition artist book. Apart from exploring the invisible viewing processes of personal photography, this article introduces the concepts of the detached and the invested viewer, as well as the corresponding concepts of the cold and the loving gaze.


Colossus ◽  
2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irving John ( Jack) Good

During the Second World War the Germans used two kinds of high-grade cryptographic system: Enigma, and what we called ‘Fish’. There were two forms of Fish. The official name for one was the Schlüsselzusatz (cipher attachment) SZ40 and 42, made by Lorenz, and which we called ‘Tunny’. The other was the Siemens T52, which we called ‘Sturgeon’. I worked on Enigma and on Tunny. After the outbreak of war I had to wait more than a year before I obtained suitable war work. My personality is not that of an officer and a gentleman, rather that of a philosopher and a mathematician, so I was not expected to join the army, other than, later on, the Home Guard. (On my first day in the Home Guard I was taught how to throw a hand grenade, although in years of compulsory cricket I was never taught how to bowl!) Eventually I was interviewed by the twice British chess champion Hugh Alexander, and the Cambridge mathematician Gordon Welchman. I knew Alexander in the chess world. I had another job offer which, unknown to me, would probably have involved work on radar. I chose Bletchley Park which I thought would be somewhat romantic. A few weeks before I joined Bletchley Park, when I was playing in a chess match where the chess master Stuart Milner-Barry, later knighted, was playing, probably on the top board, I was tactless enough to ask him whether he was working on German ciphers. He replied, ‘No, my address is Room 47, Foreign Office.’ Shortly thereafter, when I joined BP, he was there, sure enough working on German ciphers! At first the official address at Bletchley Park was indeed Room 47, Foreign Office, Whitehall, London, but soon it became permissible to give one’s private Bletchley address. I joined BP on 27 May 1941, the day the Bismarck was sunk, and was met at Bletchley railway station by Hugh Alexander. As we walked across a field, on the way to the office, Hut 8, he told me the exciting news that we were just beginning to read the German naval cipher system (which used the Enigma). I shall never forget that sensational conversation.


Atmosphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marek Półrolniczak ◽  
Ilona Potocka ◽  
Leszek Kolendowicz ◽  
Mateusz Rogowski ◽  
Szymon Kupiński ◽  
...  

A landscape is part of our daily lives and our perception of its features may significantly impact our quality of life. This article presents the results of research aimed at determining the influence of biometeorological conditions on the way in which we perceive the landscape. An eye tracker was used throughout each season of the year to determine how 52 respondents observed the landscape while taking into consideration whether the landscape had a favorable or unfavorable impact on those same respondents. Additionally, each test was preceded by the completion of a questionnaire intended to assess the mental and physical state of each respondent. The calculated eye movement indexes demonstrated the impact of the biometeorological conditions on their perception of the landscape. Statistically significant differences in their perception of the landscape were ascertained depending on the type of weather and the respondents’ general feeling irrespective of their sex.


2021 ◽  
pp. 175048132110436
Author(s):  
Gitte Rasmussen ◽  
Elisabeth Dalby Kristiansen

For some customers, the corona pandemic has turned e-shopping into a fine alternative to shopping in brick-and-mortar shops. For other customers in quarantine e-shopping is the only alternative. The long-lasting pandemic, however, has reminded us of the importance of social contacts and interactions – even if it’s just to go the supermarket to ‘mingle’. This paper investigates what ‘mingle’ means when shopping in physical self-service shops amongst unacquainted others in Denmark. It describes customers’ practice of doing self-service by organizing interaction to minimize social involvement. It shows how they, as a matter of fact, co-ordinate their conduct in ways that hampers possibilities for engaging in even small ‘ritual’ exchanges of talk. The paper draws upon a corpus of video recordings of customers’ self-service practices in shops in Denmark. In addition, the customers’ gaze was recorded with the mobile Tobii Pro X3 eye tracker. The study falls within the realm of ethnomethodological and conversation analytic studies of multimodal interaction. It concludes that self-service is achieved through co-present customers’ tacit coordination of multimodal actions in social interaction and that their practices work to achieve ‘effortlessly’ and ‘spontaneously’ being, getting, and staying out of the way, which seems to be an ideal for self-service shopping. Talk and moreover having a conversation seems to be an impediment to it.


2015 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elke Hentschel

This paper examines the verbal strategies used by speakers of German in Germany and Switzerland and speakers of Serbian in Serbia in order to voice a request. The participants in the study were asked what they would say in the following three situations: Asking for the way to the railway station in a strange city, asking their younger brother to pass the salt at the family dinner table, and buying a pretzel at the local bakery. Subsequently, the use of downtoners like 'please' or special particles was analysed, as well as the frequency of non-indicative verbal modes (subjunctive or conditional), the occurrence an equivalent of excuse me at the beginning of the request, and the use of greetings and address forms. The results show surprising differences between the three groups.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Babińska ◽  
Michal Bilewicz

AbstractThe problem of extended fusion and identification can be approached from a diachronic perspective. Based on our own research, as well as findings from the fields of social, political, and clinical psychology, we argue that the way contemporary emotional events shape local fusion is similar to the way in which historical experiences shape extended fusion. We propose a reciprocal process in which historical events shape contemporary identities, whereas contemporary identities shape interpretations of past traumas.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document