Spotted: Using fNIRS brain sensing to evaluate information visualization interfaces

A new way to measure the human impact of visualizations. 

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// published on Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems-Latest Proceeding Volume // visit site

Using fNIRS brain sensing to evaluate information visualization interfaces
Evan M M. Peck, Beste F. Yuksel, Alvitta Ottley, Robert J.K. Jacob, Remco Chang

We show how brain sensing can lend insight to the evaluation of visual interfaces and establish a role for fNIRS in visualization. Research suggests that the evaluation of visual design benefits by going beyond performance measures or questionnaires to measurements of the user's cognitive state. Unfortunately, objectively and unobtrusively monitoring the brain is difficult. While functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) has emerged as a practical brain sensing technology in HCI, visual tasks often rely on the brain's quick, massively parallel visual system, which may be inaccessible to this measurement. It is unknown whether fNIRS can distinguish differences in cognitive state that derive from visual design alone.