New publication about keystroke logging and eyetracking in combination!

Published 22 March 2023
AI generated image of a person from the back, with a hand on the keyboard of a computer. Blurred lines.
AI generated image

Capturing writers’ typing while visually attending the emerging text: a methodological approach

Knowledge about writers’ eye movements and their effects on the writing process, and its product – the finally edited text—is still limited. Previous research has demonstrated that there are differences between reading texts written by someone else and reading one’s own emerging text and that writers frequently look back into their own texts. (Torrance, Johansson, et al., 2016). For handwriting, Alamargot et al. (2007) found support that these lookbacks could occur in parallel with transcription, but to our knowledge this type of parallel processing has not been explored further, and definitely not in the context of computer writing. Considering that language production models are moving away from previous sequential or serial models (e.g., Levelt, 1989) towards models in which linguistic processes can operate in parallel (Olive, 2014), this is slightly surprising. In the present paper, we introduce a methodological approach to examine writers’ parallel processing in which we take our point of departure in visual attention rather than in the keystrokes. Capitalizing on New ScriptLog’s feature to link gaze with typing across different functional units in the writing task, we introduce and describe a method to capture and examine sequences of typing during fixations, outline how these can be examined in relation to each other, and test our approach by exploring typing during fixations in a text composition task with 14 competent adult writers.

Åsa Wengelin, Roger Johansson, Johan Frid, Victoria Johansson

Find the article in the Research portal.