Doctoral Symposium
| Schedule, Thursday, June 14, 2018, Room S304 |
| 09:00-10:00 |
| Welcome Note - Doctoral Symposium Co-Chairs (15 minutes)
1-minute introductions (1 slide, yourself and your research) |
| 10:00-10:20 |
| Coffee Break (Room S303) |
| 10:20-12:30 |
| Large Group Discussions (All Together)
10 minutes per abstract For each abstract, one student will present a summary and lead the discussion. Another student will serve as scribe. Authors may wish to have 1-2 slides with images/videos to help explain their work. |
| 12:30-13:30 |
| Lunch (Room S303) |
| 13:30-15:30 |
| Small Group Discussions with Faculty
Each group prepares 3-5 questions. Discuss critical issues of your research together with attending faculty. Faculty rotate after 20 minutes to the next group. |
| 15:30-16:00 |
| Coffee Break (Room S303) |
| 16:00-17:00 |
| Closing Remarks (All Together)
10 minutes per group. Each group prepares 1-2 slides to reflect on the input of the day and summarize lessons learned. |
| 18:00 |
| Doctoral Symposium Dinner/Social Event |
| Abstracts |
| DS1. Training Operational Monitoring in Future ATCOs Using Eye Tracking
Carolina Barzantny (DLR German Aerospace Center) |
| DS2. Automatic detection and inhibition of neutral and emotional stimuli in post-traumatic stress disorder: an eye-tracking study
Wivine Blekic (University of Mons) and Mandy Rossignol (University of Mons) |
| DS3. Audio-visual interaction in emotion perception for communication
M.J. de Boer (University Medical Center Groningen); D. Başkent (University Medical Center Groningen); F.W. Cornelissen (University Medical Center Groningen) |
| DS4. Asynchronous Gaze Sharing: Towards a Dynamic Help System to Support Learners During Program Comprehension
Fabian Deitelhoff (University of Applied Sciences and Arts Dortmund) |
| DS5. Investigating the multicausality of processing speed deficits across developmental disorders with Eye Tracking and EEG
Sabine Dziemian (University of Zurich) |
| DS6. Using eye tracking to simplify screening for visual field defects and improve vision rehabilitation
Birte Gestefeld (University Medical Center Groningen); Alessandro Grillini (University Medical Center Groningen); Jan-Bernard Marsman (University Medical Center Groningen); Frans W. Cornelisssen (University Medical Center Groningen) |
| DS7. Intelligent cockpit: eye tracking integration to enhance the pilot-aircraft integration
Christophe Lounis (ISAE-SUPAERO); Vsevolod Peysakhovich (ISAE-SUPAERO); Mickael Causse (ISAE-SUPAERO) |
| DS8. Eye-tracking measures in audiovisual stimuli in infants at high genetic risk for ASD: challenging issues
Itziar Lozano (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid); Ruth Campos (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid); Mercedes Belinchón (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid) |
| DS9. Virtual Reality as a Proxy for Real-Life Social Attention?
Marius Rubo (University of Wuerzburg); Matthias Gamer(University of Wuerzburg) |
| DS10. Towards Concise Gaze Sharing
Christian Schlösser (University of Applied Sciences and Arts Dortmund) |
| DS11. Seeing into the music score: Eye-tracking and sight-reading in a choral context
Maria Timoshenko (Åbo Akademi University) |
| DS12. Seeing in Time - An Investigation of Entrainment and Visual Processing in Toddlers
Hsing-fen Tu (Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences) |
| DS13. A Text Entry Interface using Smooth Pursuit Movements and Language Model
Zhe Zeng (Technische Universität Berlin); Matthias Roetting (Technische Universität Berlin) |












