Blink Rate Patterns Provide a Reliable Measure of Individual Engagement with Scene Content

Eye-blinking has emerged as a promising means of measuring viewer engagement with visual content. This method capitalizes on the fact that although we remain largely unaware of our eye-blinking in everyday situations, eye-blinks are inhibited at precise moments in time so as to minimize the loss of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inScientific reports Vol. 10; no. 1; p. 8267
Main Authors Ranti, Carolyn, Jones, Warren, Klin, Ami, Shultz, Sarah
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 19.05.2020
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Eye-blinking has emerged as a promising means of measuring viewer engagement with visual content. This method capitalizes on the fact that although we remain largely unaware of our eye-blinking in everyday situations, eye-blinks are inhibited at precise moments in time so as to minimize the loss of visual information that occurs during a blink. Probabilistically, the more important the visual information is to the viewer, the more likely he or she will be to inhibit blinking. In the present study, viewer engagement was experimentally manipulated in order to: (1) replicate past studies suggesting that a group of viewers will blink less often when watching content that they perceive as more important or relevant; (2) test the reliability of the measure by investigating constraints on the timescale over which blink rate patterns can be used to accurately quantify viewer engagement; and (3) examine whether blink rate patterns can be used to quantify what an individual – as opposed to a group of viewers—perceives as engaging. Results demonstrate that blink rate patterns can be used to measure changes in individual and group engagement that unfold over relatively short (1 second) and long (60 second) timescales. However, for individuals with lower blink rates, blink rate patterns may provide less optimal measures when engagement shifts rapidly (at intervals of 1 second or less). Findings support the use of eye-blink measures in future studies investigating a person’s subjective perception of how engaging a stimulus is.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-020-64999-x