Eye tracking in the wild: Piloting a real-life assessment paradigm for older adults

  • Damaris Aschwanden Florida State University
  • Nicolas Langer University of Zurich
  • Mathias Allemand University of Zurich
Keywords: feasibility study, real life, eye movements, eye tracking, personality, individual differences, grocery shopping, usability, older age

Abstract

Previous research showed associations between personality traits and eye movements of young adults in the laboratory. However, less is known about these associations in real life and in older age. Primarily, there seems to be no paradigm to assess eye movements of older adults in real life. The present feasibility study thus aimed to test grocery shopping as a real-life assessment paradigm with older adults. Additionally, possible links between personality traits and eye movements were explored. The sample consisted of 38 older individuals (M = 72.85 years). Participants did their grocery shopping in a supermarket while wearing an eye tracker. Three key feasibility issues were examined, that is (1) wearability of the eye tracker during grocery shopping, (2) recording, and (3) evaluation of eye movements in a real-life context. Our real-life assessment paradigm showed to be feasible to implement and acceptable to older adults. This feasibility study provides specific practical recommendations which may be useful for fu-ture studies that plan to innovatively expand the traditional methods repertoire of personality science and aging research by using eye tracking in real life.

Author Biographies

Damaris Aschwanden, Florida State University

College of Medicine, Department of Geriatrics

Nicolas Langer, University of Zurich

Department of Psychology, Methods of Plasticity Research

Mathias Allemand, University of Zurich

Department of Psychology, Differential Healthy Aging Research

Published
2019-05-24
How to Cite
Aschwanden, D., Langer, N., & Allemand, M. (2019). Eye tracking in the wild: Piloting a real-life assessment paradigm for older adults. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.16910/jemr.12.1.4
Section
Articles