Cluttered Screens – An Eye-Tracking Study of Visual Attention Allocation among Viewers of TV News.

An Eye-Tracking Study of Visual Attention Allocation Among Viewers of TV News

Article / Paper

Jan Hensellek

2025

Contemporary television news programmes are often complex examples of hybrid communication (see Bucher, ‘Multimodal understanding or reception as interaction’, 2011). Television news presents related as well as unrelated information in both a linear and non-linear fashion by combining the news read with a variety of […]

Contemporary television news programmes are often complex examples of hybrid communication (see Bucher, ‘Multimodal understanding or reception as interaction’, 2011). Television news presents related as well as unrelated information in both a linear and non-linear fashion by combining the news read with a variety of visual elements. Studies utilizing eye-tracking have found the visual attention received by the various types of elements to vary considerably (see Josephson and Holmes, ‘Clutter or content? How on-screen enhancements affect how TV viewers scan and what they learn’, 2006; Pjesivac et al., ‘Television infographics as orienting response’, 2021; Rodrigues et al., ‘A television news graphics layout analysis method using eye tracking, 2012; and ‘Analysis of the layout on TV news reception, 2014). ‘The limited capacity model of motivated mediated message processing (see Lang, ‘The limited capacity model of mediated message processing’, 2000) also suggests those elements can both positively and negatively impact viewers’ ability to effectively process information.


Hensellek, Jan. 2025. Cluttered Screens – An Eye-Tracking Study of Visual Attention Allocation among Viewers of TV News.: An Eye-Tracking Study of Visual Attention Allocation Among Viewers of TV News. Visual Communication 24(3). 570–594.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/14703572251335839

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