A 3-day onsite course, taught by experts, that deals with the fundamental unavoidable decision-making problems you will encounter while doing eye tracking research.
Time: 13 December 2021 - 15 December 2021
Place: Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands
Price: 795€ (including course materials)
More information: Visit the Utrechts University website
Associate Professor
Faculty of Social & Behavioral Sciences
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Ignace Hooge (1966) studied physics and received his PhD in 1996. He has been doing eye tracking since 1992 and used many different eye-tracking techniques (coils, video, mobile). Currently, he works in experimental psychology at Utrecht University. Besides science and teaching he worked in commercial marketing research and tested many billboards and advertisements with eye tracking. His research interests range from eye tracking methodology (mainly data analysis), visual perception, attention, and visual search to applied psychology. Currently he is involved in research concerning food choice, packaging, infants and fundamental eye-tracker issues. Ignace was awarded the teacher of the university award in 2015.
Post Doctoral Researcher
Faculty of Social & Behavioral Sciences
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Roy studied psychology and is currently a postdoc at experimental and developmental psychology at Utrecht University. During his PhD, Roy studied visual search behavior in infancy using eye-tracking, and worked on improving eye-tracking methodology for difficult participant groups. Besides developmental work, he is also involved in eye-tracking in social interaction. Next to his research, Roy teaches psychology students how to set up experiments and analyse data, and was awarded a junior teaching award of the Psychology department in 2016.