Conception and Analysis for New Social Networks in University
Community
Alan Quimbita
1a
, Andrés Pupiales
1b
and Graciela Guerrero
1,2 c
1
Departamento de Ciencias de la Computación, Universidad de las Fuerzas Armadas ESPE, Sangolquí, Ecuador
2
Departamento de Sistemas Informáticos, Universidad de Castilla – La Mancha, Campus Universitario s/n. Albacete, Spain
Keywords: Human Computer Interaction, Eye Tracking, Social Networks, Systematic Mapping.
Abstract: Social networks have dramatically changed the way people relate to each other. In the university context it
has also been used as communication tools that intervene in the learning process. The objective of this study
is to initiate a research process for the analysis, design and development of a new social network for the
university community. Thus, a systematic mapping of literature was proposed with the research topic: social
network analysis based on eye tracking. The method used establishes a research protocol that defines the
guidelines for research, information extraction and analysis of the results of the mapping study. Among the
results obtained, there is a growing trend in the use of eye tracking to obtain requirements prior to the design
of a social network.
1 INTRODUCTION
Communication within a Higher Education
Institution (HEI) is of vital importance, each member
of the community must be aware of the different
activities that the institution carries out; likewise, the
different processes or procedures that each member
can carry out and the places where these are carried
out. This type of communication carried out within
the HEIs is known as internal communication;
(Vértice, 2007) defines it as "[...] that which is
oriented to the internal public which is the group of
people who make up an institution and who are
directly linked to it". HEIs have several internal
communication tools such as social networks, blogs,
the official website of the HEI, bulletins, posters, etc.
(De La Hoz, Acevedo, & Torres, 2015), social
networks being the most used tools in internal
communication (Almenara & Marín, 2013) due to the
globalization of the same.
(Aguirre Naranjo, 2014) states that within the
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador (PUCE)
the most frequent activity among students is the use
of Facebook, in the same way Aguirre confirms that
students usually inform themselves about the
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3728-9736
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6064-1086
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0903-734X
activities that take place through social networks
(14%), email (24%) and conversations with
colleagues (28%), demonstrating that digital
communication channels are well received by the
university community.
Ramakrishna claims that social networks have
significantly changed the ways in which people
interact (Kumar, Maheshwari, & Kumar, 2016). Due
to the habituation of the use of social networks, the
media was affected in two ways: positive, which
encompasses different benefits such as: instantaneous
communication, asynchronous communication,
elimination of spatial barriers (long distances), etc.,
and a negative one, showing how the media has
become more important in the usual way of
communication in today's societies. (Djamasbi,
Siegel, & Tullis, 2005) points out that "a large main
image, celebrity images, short texts and a search
system are design elements that appeal to a
Generation Y audience" (Bodrunova, Yakunin, &
Smolin, 2016). (Bodrunova & Yakunin, 2017) state
that "a good user experience can be achieved by
creating pages that generate confidence in users".
They also differentiate two levels on which the
evaluation is carried out: the macro level, general
592
Quimbita, A., Pupiales, A. and Guerrero, G.
Conception and Analysis for New Social Networks in University Community.
DOI: 10.5220/0009566105920598
In Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS 2020) - Volume 2, pages 592-598
ISBN: 978-989-758-423-7
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
design structure, and the micro level, which is
subdivided into syntagm and typography.
The communication work within the HEIs has
been affected by the ineffectiveness of the different
communication channels used in them, giving rise to
misinformation of the members of the university
community, causing total or partial ignorance of news
of great importance related to events, campaigns or
projects that are carried out within the community, in
the same way this misinformation affects negatively
the institutional image of the HEI (Andrade, 2019).
Some examples that show the ineffectiveness of
the communication channels can be found in studies
such as the one carried out by (Aguirre Naranjo,
2014) who shows that a large percentage of the PUCE
university community qualifies the communication
channels that exist within the same institution as
ineffective, (Cabascango, 2018) states that most of
the community of the Universidad San Francisco de
Quito (USFQ) is moderately informed about the
events that have taken place within the institution and
(Andrade, 2019)states that a large percentage of the
community of the Universidad Laica Vicente
Rocafuerte considers both internal and external
communication to be inefficient.
The objective of this paper is to present a
systematic mapping to provide a vision that allows
HEIs to know about the different tools for the
conception and analysis of a social network, which
allows to greatly improve the internal communication
present within the community and its institutional
image.
The rest of this paper is structured as follows.
Section 2 explains the research method used. Section
3 presents the results of the systematic mapping.
Section 4 presents the discussion. Finally, Section 5
shows the main findings of the investigation.
2 METHOD
This section describes the methodology used in the
systematic mapping of social network and website
analysis using eye tracking technologies. First, the
methodology of the research is described, where the
approach of a research protocol based on the
determined search area stands out. We then present
the collection of information based on the proposed
protocol, the sources and search chains, and the
selection of studies after applying the established
inclusion and exclusion criteria.
2.1 Investigation Methodology
2.1.1 Research Interest
This study is designed to meet the purposes explained
below. Words like “is”, “or”, “then”, etc. should not
be capitalized unless they are the first word of the
title. The general objective is to be an investigation as
a starting point for the analysis, design and
development of a new social network in the university
context. Thus, it is expected that the results of the
research will provide a guideline for the following
phases in the creation of an internal communication
tool for the university community, based on the use
of eye tracking technology as a method to obtain
specifications and features focused on the user
experience.
The first objective of this systematic mapping
study is to quantitatively identify scientific research
based on the study of social networks, analysing their
interface, the important or most used characteristics,
or the techniques for their design using eye tracking
methods. The second is to execute a broad temporal
analysis of research related to the study of social
networks and their specifications using eye tracking,
with the intention of determining a trend (increasing
or decreasing) in this area of research. The third
objective is to extract the eye tracking tools used in
the analysis of the social network interface or its
design. The last objective is to identify the
characteristics of the social networks studied with eye
tracking and frame them in a specific research
category, after an in-depth analysis of the literature.
To conduct this secondary study, the guidelines
proposed by (Petersen, Vakkalanka, & Kuzniarz,
2015) were observed. In addition, the "Model
Protocol for Systematic Mapping" (EBSE-RG., 2009)
was used as a checklist to corroborate that a proper
process has been followed. The process consists of
three phases: (1) The Research Directive contains the
protocol designed for the study, identifies the
scenario in which it will be investigated, and then
presents the research questions that will guide the rest
of the work. (2) Information gathering indicates
relevant studies according to the inclusion and
exclusion criteria defined in the protocol previously.
(3) The Results phase carries out the mapping of the
literature based on the established criteria and its
analysis to answer the research questions.
2.1.2 Research Directives
This section presents the research protocol as the first
step in conducting systematic literature mapping.
Conception and Analysis for New Social Networks in University Community
593
Words like “is”, “or”, “then”, etc. should not be
capitalized unless they are the first word of the
subtitle. It was developed by the first author and then
revised and applied by both authors. The protocol
establishes a topic of study (social network analysis
using eye tracking), and results in the setting of
research questions; the search process includes
keywords for the search strings, inclusion and
exclusion criteria to select the studies and quality
assessment, and the databases to be used. Finally, the
method of information extraction is presented. To
reduce the risk to validity across the study it was
established within the protocol that each phase of the
mapping study must be validated by both authors in
scheduled sessions.
The research questions (RQ) for this study are
(RQ1) Are there any published studies related to the
analysis of interfaces, features or design of social
networks using eye tracking technology? How many
studies have been published? (RQ2) Is there a time
trend in research based on analysis of social networks
using eye tracking? (RQ3) RQ3. What tools or
platforms are considered in eye tracking-based social
network analysis? (RQ4) According to the data
analysis, what are the characteristics of the social
networks that have been studied using eye tracking?
Within which research category are they framed?
2.2 Information Gathering
The study search strategy should lead to the inclusion
and exclusion of documents. The search strategy of
this study involves database queries using customized
search strings, followed by manual filtering of the
studies found through previously established
inclusion and exclusion terms. Two investigators
were in charge of executing the search strategy.
2.2.1 Sources and Search Chains
Three reference databases were consulted in the area:
Scopus (Elsevier), IEEE Xplore (IEEE) and ACM DL
(ACM). These ones were selected because of their
relevance in the study topic. From the established
research questions, the key words were identified,
which make up the search chain. All the words
forming the search string are connected by AND/OR
to ensure that all the papers resulting from the search
are relevant to the research topic. The final search
string was: "click through rate" AND ("gaze tracking"
OR "eye tracking") AND ("heat map" OR "heat
system") AND "social network".
The first part of the search string consists of the
click indicator using its English translation; the
second part consists of the terms for eye tracking and
English synonym; the third part consists of the
representation of the data analysis through maps. For
each of the searches in the different databases, the
search was filtered so that the words within the string
are found within the title, summary or keywords of
the different results obtained.
2.2.2 Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
The terms of inclusion and exclusion established to
perform the relevance filtering of the resulting studies
are as follows:
Terms of inclusion:
I1. Studies using tools for eye-tracking/gaze-
tracking on social networks/websites
I2. Studies using tools for click-through-rate on
social networks/websites
I3. Studies that have been published between
January 1, 2014 and October 22, 2019
I4. Studies that are research articles from
journals and conference papers.
Terms of exclusion:
E1. Studies that have no proven scientific basis.
E2. Duplicate studies in several databases.
E3. Studies not accessible in full text.
E4. Studies published before January 1, 2014
2.2.3 Search Process
As shown in the search process described in Fig. 1,
the search string was applied in the different
databases listed above, a large number of studies were
obtained.
Figure 1: Search process. Automatic search and filtering of
studies considering the inclusion criteria I1, I2, I3 and
exclusion criteria E1, E2, E3 and E4 Total number of
studies obtained.
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Two researchers were responsible for the filtering
of the 462 studies obtained independently. The first
screening process involved reading titles and
abstracts, thus 60 studies were identified. To
complete the screening process, the researchers
performed a complete reading of each study. In
addition to taking into account the inclusion and
exclusion criteria set out above, a total of 17 studies
were obtained that were useful for the research; Fig.
2 shows the number of articles selected by each
database. Searching for articles in a single database
may result in the loss of important articles, justifying
the need to use more than one.
Figure 2: Number of studies selected according to each
database.
3 RESULTS
Finally, 17 publications were selected according to
the methodology described above. The relevant
information to answer the research questions was
extracted in a summary table where the following
fields were detailed for each selected publication: eye
tracking tools or platforms used in the study, web
pages used for eye tracking analysis, the
characteristics of the social networks studied with eye
tracking. Then, descriptive statistics and frequency
analysis were used to answer the questions posed in
this study.
RQ1. Are there any published studies related to
the analysis of interfaces, features or design of social
networks using eye tracking technology? How many
studies have been published?
Within the study period between January 1, 2014,
and October 31, 2019, a total of 17 studies directly
related to the analysis of the characteristics or design
of social networks using eye tracking were published.
These works were indexed in important databases
such as IEEE Xplore and Scopus. The selected studies
are listed and discussed in the Appendix.
RQ2. Is there a time trend in research based on
social network analysis using eye tracking?
Based on the years of publication of the 17
selected studies, an increasing temporal trend has
been observed. This increase in social network
studies using eye tracking can be seen in Fig. 3.
where, in addition, the trend line is increasing. In the
year 2014 there were a maximum of 3 publications
and then it is remarkable a decrease of 33.33% in the
number of publications for the year 2015. In the
following years, more studies in this specific area are
observed, with a 50% increase until 2018. For the last
year analysed, 2019, research on social networks
based on eye tracking increased by 100% with respect
to the years with fewer publications in this area.
Figure 3: Time trend based on the number of studies
published over the years.
RQ3. What tools or platforms are considered in
the analysis of social networks based on eye
tracking?
From the studies compiled in this research it has
been observed that Tobii eye tracking systems are the
most used, being mentioned in 35.3% of the analysed
research (Chynał, Falkowska, & Sobecki, 2018),
(Güner & İnal, 2015) (Li, Che, Yuan, & Li, 2018),
(Mabila & Ssemugabi, 2014), (Shahimin, Saad,
Sivaji, Tzuaan, & Khean, 2014) and (Wong, Bartels,
& Chrobot, 2014). Another tool that is preferred in
eye tracking studies is Eye-tribe being used on 11.8%
occasions (Divya, Amudha, & Jyotsna, 2016 ), and
(Pavani, Prakash, Koushik, Amudha, & Jyotsna,
2019). These visual tracking systems have in
common that they feature fast calibration
environments, and parameterizable configuration
options. On the other hand, among the rest of the
alternative tools that have been used are: Mangold
Vision Eye Tracking System (Eger, 2018), SMI RED
eye tracking (Kumar, Maheshwari, & Kumar, 2016),
EyeNTNU (Wang & Hung, 2019), Gaze Visual (Kar
& Corcoran, 2019) and UXmood (Franco, et al.,
2019); each tool has been used in at least 5.9% of the
Conception and Analysis for New Social Networks in University Community
595
research on social networks based on eye tracking. As
shown in Figure 4, Tobii stands out as the most used
tool in eye tracking studies.
Figure 4: Outstanding tools in social network studies using
eye tracking.
RQ4. According to the data analysis, what are
the characteristics of the social networks that have
been studied using eye tracking? Within which
research category are they framed?
In order to make the best use of the analysis
capacity with eye tracking some researches raise the
analysis of the characteristics of the social network
websites at macro and micro level. Thus, some of the
aspects analysed were: at macro level the
composition, colour, zoning and spacing at page
level, combination of content and visual relevance of
design elements; at micro level individual block
parameters, typography, line spacing and readability
(Bodrunova, Yakunin, & Smolin, Comparing
efficacy of web design of university websites: Mixed
methodology and first results for Russia and the USA,
2016), (Bodrunova, Yakunin, & Smolin, 2016), (Li,
Che, Yuan, & Li, 2018) and (Divya, Amudha, &
Jyotsna, 2016 ). Another viewpoint adopted for social
network analysis using eye tracking defines the
search for a user-generated pattern when browsing
through web pages, for example: examining user
viewing patterns and attention to banners (Güner &
İnal, 2015) understanding viewing patterns on
Facebook pages (Kumar, Maheshwari, & Kumar,
2016)analysing users' visual behaviour while
browsing a website (Wong, Bartels, & Chrobot,
2014); studying the distribution of visual attention
when browsing through Facebook pages (Wang &
Hung, 2019).
Social networks currently are also analyzed by
using eye tracking when looking to establish a
relationship between the user's visual attention in
addition to the time it takes to perform a specific task.
The studies that followed this line of research raised
the following approaches: what elements the user
focuses on while searching for information on a web
page, and how long it takes to find the desired
elements (Chynał, Falkowska, & Sobecki, 2018);
determine the time and frequency of visual fixation to
infer the elements of interest of the student in an
educational portal and show exactly in what order and
for how long the students look at a set of web objects
(Eger, 2018); what elements the user focuses on while
performing a task and how long it takes to complete
it (Mabila & Ssemugabi, 2014); determine the
accuracy, efficiency and satisfaction of users with the
interface when performing a specific task (Olmsted-
Hawala, Holland, & Quach, 2014); establish the
relationship between the time of the first fixation and
the duration of the fixation recorded to the elements
of a web page using an eye tracking tool and then
create a heat map (Shahimin, Saad, Sivaji, Tzuaan, &
Khean, 2014). Finally, other research used eye
tracking to study the features that a website should
have for its implementation (Hudák, Kianičková, &
Madleňák, 2017), highlighting those that could help
navigability (Pavani, Prakash, Koushik, Amudha, &
Jyotsna, 2019) and improve user satisfaction
regarding the layout of the elements that are presented
such as: video, audio and text (Franco, et al., 2019).
From the results obtained for the last research
question (RQ4), four dimensions have been
determined through which social networks are
analyzed using eye tracking: evaluation of website
characteristics, identification of visual patterns,
visual fixation/ task completion time relationship and
analysis of website requirements. Then, these four
dimensions were framed within a research area
(Computer Science) and category (Theory &
Methods and Software Engineering) according to
Web of Science (WoS). Fig. 5. shows the number of
studies of each dimension crossed with the categories
proposed by WoS.
4 DISCUSSION
First, when analysing the time trend in research based
on social network analysis using eye tracking, there is
an augmentation present not only in the number of
studies carried out, but also in the fields were this
technology was applied.
The predominance of studies with a high content
of scientific evidence is of great importance to
establish the aspects and evaluation tools that are used
in most studies, which allows to point to a high degree
of maturity of the state of the art. Regarding to the
evolution over time of the number of publications in
recent years, it has been noted that the number of
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studies has maintained a slight increase, showing that
interest in this area has not shown any decrease, on
the contrary, it maintains its importance as an area of
avant-garde research.
Figure 5: Number of studies of each dimension according
to the categories proposed by WoS.
The results obtained in the present systematic
mapping show that most of the studies make use of
Tobii equipment for research, related to eye tracking
within different web systems, showing this tool as the
preferred one for this kind of evaluations; in the same
way, it can be observed that open source software
within the eye tracking area is very scarce, but those
existing ones are available through GitHub so that
users can make improvements and modifications that
are useful for their development.
There are two specific categories (according to
WoS) were the eye tracking technologies are being
used: a) theory & methodology, and b) software
engineering. The first category includes the
recognition of visual patterns when the user is
performing a particular task, hence the eye tracking
tools are used to create and analyse these patterns.
The second category involves the eye tracking
technologies in the development process of websites
at two points: at the beginning, for getting the initial
requirements; and at the end, to evaluate the features
developed in the web design through the user
experience and heat maps.
5 CONCLUSIONS
This systematic mapping study shows a remarkable
increase in the interest of using eye tracking tools for
social network analysis, thus leading to a continuous
improvement in the field of web systems
development. Proof of this is the increase of studies
related to this research topic due to more studies were
carried out within the last five years, and a high
percentage of scientific evidence is reflected in
researching of a similar nature.
In addition to eye tracking tools, it was observed
that a large number of studies were conducted using
Tobii eye tracking equipment, thus demonstrating the
quality, confidence and adequate performance of this
specific device. On the other hand, the mapping
showed that the areas of greatest interest in the use of
eye tracking technology were: the identification of
visual patterns and visual fixation/time relationship in
the performance of tasks. However, it is needed to
point the boost of eye tracking in software
engineering tasks in the last three years, such as:
website’s features evaluation and web site
requirements analysis. Finally, it should be noted that
two groups of features were identified that are
evaluated when using eye tracking tools, which are:
a) those that are related to evaluations of website
design at macro level (composition, colour, zoning
and spacing at page level, combination of content and
visual relevance of design elements) and micro level
(individual block parameters, typography, line
spacing and readability); and b) those that relate to the
user experience (efficiency, navigability, satisfaction)
when performing certain tasks within the website,
which besides leads to the generation of visual
patterns and heat maps.
The eye tracking technology has been involved in
the whole process of websites development: to
establish the start point; to evaluate the user
experience when interacting with the website and get
patterns; and when an improvement in the web design
is needed. According to these results, the use of eye
tracking in development of new social networks is
expected to maintain the interest of HEIs.
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Accessibility Practice, 109–118.
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