This edited volume presents fundamentals as well as applications of oculomotor methods in industrial and clinical settings. The topical spectrum covers 1.) basics and background material, 2.) methods such as recording techniques, markov models, Lévy flights, pupillometry and many more, as well as 3.) a broad range of applications in clinical and industrial settings. The target audience primarily comprises research experts and practitioners, but the book may also be beneficial for graduate students.
Introduction to the Study of Eye Movements.- Saccades: Fundamentals and
Neural Mechanisms.- Fixational Eye Movements.- Smooth eye movements in
humans: Smooth pursuit, optokinetic nystagmus and vestibular ocular
reflex.- Visual Perception and eye movements.- Scences, saliency maps and
scanpaths.- Eye movements during reading.- Eye tracking
methodology.- Advanced statistical methods for eye movement analysis and
modelling: A gentle introduction.- Advanced statistical methods for eye
movement analysis and modelling: A gentle
introduction.- Pupillometry.- Functional magnetic resonance imaging of eye
movements: Introduction to methods and basic phenomena.- Eye movement
recordings in natural settings.- Eye movements in primates An experimental
approach.- Typical and atypical development of eye movement control.- Adult
Psychiatry.- Neurology.- Pharmacology.- Neuromarketing.- Neuroeconomics.- Use
r Experience Research and Web Usability.- Vehicle Control.- Human-Computer
Interface.
Christoph Klein studied psychology and philosophy at the Universities of Bonn and Hamburg. He was awarded his PhD in psychology on event-related potentials in schizophrenia at the University of Konstanz in 1995 and his Habilitation on developmental and clinical eye movement research at the University of Freiburg in 2000. After working for several years both at Bangor University, UK, and the University of Freiburg, he fully returned to Germany in 2017 and is now Professor in the Departments of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Universities of Freiburg and Cologne.
Ulrich Ettinger studied psychology at Goldsmiths College and neuroscience at Kings College London. He was awarded his PhD in psychology on studies of eye movements in the schizophrenia spectrum in 2003. After a postdoctoral research fellowship at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, in 2003/2004, he worked as Research Fellow, Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at Kings College London before returning to his native Germany for an Emmy Noether group leadership position at the University of Munich in 2009, where he also completed his Habilitation in 2011. In 2012 he took up a Professorship in the Department of Psychology at the University of Bonn.