Fixations, regressions, and results : eye-tracking metrics as real-time signals of cognitive engagement in flipped-class quizzes

  • Yuanyuan WANG
  • , Nina XIE*
  • , Yujun LIU*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal PublicationsJournal Article (refereed)peer-review

Abstract

Introduction: Educators need real time evidence of how students process pre class quiz items in flipped courses, not just whether answers are right or wrong. We examined whether two classroom feasible eye tracking metrics—fixation intensity (total dwell time) and regression rate (proportion of backward saccades)—provide interpretable, item level signals of cognitive engagement once surface text features are taken into account.

Methods: Thirty four undergraduates completed 320 analysable attempts on 55 multiple choice items coded by Bloom’s taxonomy while a 60 Hz tracker recorded gaze. Crossed mixed effects models included a covariate for each item’s total word count. A logistic mixed model tested whether fixation intensity and regression rate predicted correctness beyond Bloom level, gender, and length. After each block, students reported perceived mental effort to compare subjective and gaze based indicators.

Results: After controlling for total word count, Bloom category did not uniquely predict fixation intensity or regression rate, suggesting that previously observed demand patterns largely reflected text length. In the accuracy model, fixation intensity showed a small, positive association with being correct, whereas regression rate showed a small, negative association.

Discussion: In authentic flipped class quizzes, fixation intensity and regression rate can serve as complementary, real time indicators of engagement, but only when item length and layout are standardised or statistically modelled. Claims about differences across Bloom levels should be made cautiously. We outline design guidance for future item banks—length matched stems, fixed numbers of options, and pre registered word count covariates—to enable firmer inferences and practical classroom diagnostics.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1639273
Number of pages12
JournalFrontiers in Education
Volume10
Early online date6 Nov 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Nov 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 Wang, Xie and Liu.

Funding

We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Teaching Development Grant from Lingnan University for the project titled “Navigating the Digital Learning Landscape with Eye-tracking: The Confluence of Flipped Classrooms and Experiential Education under OBATL.”

Keywords

  • eye tracking
  • fixation intensity
  • regression rate
  • flipped classroom
  • process data
  • adaptive assessment

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