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Mobile Eye Tracking
New avenues for the study of gaze in social interaction
e-Book – Open Access 

ISBN 9789027244925
Situated within the flourishing domain of pragmatics, this volume explores the crucial role of gaze in human interaction, with a particular focus on the potential of mobile eye tracking to advance our methodology and understanding of multimodal communication. Readers will find a comprehensive, balanced exploration of the benefits and challenges associated with taking eye tracking out of the lab to record authentic interaction in real-life settings. By integrating insights from pragmatics, the contributions highlight the function of gaze as a resource for coordination, cooperation and joint sense-making in human interaction. The chapters are written by leading scholars in the field as well as younger researchers. They offer in-depth methodological discussions alongside detailed case studies from static and mobile interaction settings. The book makes a strong case for the use of mobile eye tracking in addition to video cameras. It provides researchers with a solid and state-of-the-art foundation on which to make informed choices about recording technologies for their own work. The volume is a must-read for scholars in multimodal conversation analysis, interactional linguistics, as well as cognitive linguists, linguistic anthropologists, and psychologists with a strong interest in new ways of studying gaze in social interaction.
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 351] 2025. vi, 316 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 13 May 2025
Published online on 13 May 2025
© John Benjamins
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1. Introduction: Mobile eye tracking for the study of gaze in social interactionAnja Stukenbrock and Elisabeth Zima | pp. 1–21
- Part 1. Methodological considerations on the use of mobile eye tracking to study gaze in social interaction
- Chapter 2. Why research on gaze in social interaction needs mobile eye trackingElisabeth Zima, Peter Auer and Christoph Rühlemann | pp. 24–66
- Chapter 3. The influence of the specificities of gaze behavior on emerging and ensuing interaction: A contribution to the discussion of the use of eye-tracking recordings for EMCA analysisGitte Rasmussen and Elisabeth Dalby Kristiansen | pp. 67–99
- Chapter 4. Mobile eye-tracking and mixed-methods approaches to interaction analysisBert Oben, Clarissa de Vries and Geert Brône | pp. 100–127
- Part 2. Exploring interactional phenomena with mobile eye tracking
- Stationary settings
- Chapter 5. On the relationship between gaze and the German recipient token hm_hmJohanna Masuch | pp. 132–164
- Chapter 6. Gaze aversion as a marker of disalignment in interactionsMaximilian Krug | pp. 165–187
- Chapter 7. Pupil size indicates planning effort at turn transitions in natural conversationMathias Barthel and Christoph Rühlemann | pp. 188–205
- Mobile settings
- Chapter 8. Laughter and gaze among talkers on a walkPeter Auer and Barbara Laner | pp. 208–242
- Chapter 9. When the establishment of joint attention becomes problematic: How participants manage divergent and competing foci of attentionAnja Stukenbrock and Angeliki Balantani | pp. 243–276
- Chapter 10. Joint attention without language? On intersubjectivity and the joint experience of natureKerstin Botsch, Peter Auer, Barbara Laner and Martin Pfeiffer | pp. 277–310
- Appendix A | pp. 311–313
- Appendix B | p. 314
- Index | pp. 315–316