학술논문

Cross-Task and Cross-Participant Classification of Cognitive Load in an Emergency Simulation Game
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing IEEE Trans. Affective Comput. Affective Computing, IEEE Transactions on. 14(2):1558-1571 Jun, 2023
Subject
Computing and Processing
Robotics and Control Systems
Signal Processing and Analysis
Task analysis
Real-time systems
Particle measurements
Atmospheric measurements
Adaptation models
Games
Load modeling
Eye tracking
physiology
intelligent systems
cognitive model
physiological measures
psychology
adaptive and intelligent educational systems
Language
ISSN
1949-3045
2371-9850
Abstract
Assessment of cognitive load is a major step towards adaptive interfaces. However, non-invasive assessment is rather subjective as well as task specific and generalizes poorly, mainly due to methodological limitations. Additionally, it heavily relies on performance data like game scores or test results. In this study, we present an eye-tracking approach that circumvents these shortcomings and allows for effective generalizing across participants and tasks. First, we established classifiers for predicting cognitive load individually for a typical working memory task (n-back), which we then applied to an emergency simulation game by considering the similar ones and weighting their predictions. Standardization steps helped achieve high levels of cross-task and cross-participant classification accuracy between 63.78 and 67.25 percent for the distinction between easy and hard levels of the emergency simulation game. These very promising results could pave the way for novel adaptive computer-human interaction across domains and particularly for gaming and learning environments.