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The Eyes' View of Multimedia News Features
Now that we're in the broadband-Internet era, news
websites can safely go beyond text and static images --
and many routinely do. Audio-narrated slide shows, video,
interactive animated info-graphics ... you'll find those
and more while surfing for news these days.
The Eyetrack III researchers decided to take a
through-the-eyes look at what people see and how they
behave when they encounter multimedia news features. Our
testing wasn't comprehensive; rather, it represents the
beginning of a more serious look at how to design
multimedia editorial content so that viewers best find and
comprehend the information contained.
For this multimedia section of Eyetrack III, we conducted
two exercises:
Multimedia Recall &
Comprehension
We took two multimedia features (from NYTimes.com) and
created text-only versions. Each of our testers viewed one
multimedia feature and one text feature on different
subjects, then we asked follow-up questions to measure
their recall of facts presented in the features. We
compared their performance. And we tracked their eyes
throughout the test, so we could match comprehension with
that data to determine whether they looked at the part of
the page containing the answer. story>
Observations on Multimedia
News Features
Next, we gave our test subjects a list of real-world
multimedia news features and 10 minutes to view whatever
interested them. The eyetracker rolled as we observed how
they interacted with the features they chose to view. This
informal test revealed interesting observations and gave
us clues about what to test for in future
multimedia-content eyetracking studies. story>
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