Gaze point in the evacuation drills: Analysis of eye movement at the indoor wayfinding

Young Hoon Bae, Young Chan Kim, Ryun Seok Oh, Jong Yeong Son, Won Hwa Hong, Jun Ho Choi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

Signage systems are the main means of resolving the wayfinding problem in an emergency evacuation. However, recent literature has proven that signage systems are often not effective in an indoor wayfinding decision-making situation. Many studies that attempted to solve the problem did not consider the interaction between the optimal location of signage systems and gaze characteristics. Therefore, this study aimed to provide basic database to determine the optimal location of signage by analysing the characteristics of eye movements according to the type of junction. To achieve this, we conducted evacuation experiments in a maze set composed of eight junctions that we created ourselves and analysed the eye movement data of participants with 5196 gaze points and duration of 895,581.49 ms. The result showed that participants most often look between 100 cm and 150 cm (vertical height) in the corridor and in junctions. In addition, the gaze points of the evacuees are quantified by the horizontal and vertical directions according to the type of junction where the wayfinding decisions occur. This investigation showed that there are marked differences depending on the type.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2902
JournalSustainability (Switzerland)
Volume12
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2020

Keywords

  • Evacuation
  • Eye movement
  • Eye tracker
  • Gaze point
  • Human behaviour in fire
  • Indoor wayfinding

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