GazeAway: Designing for Gaze Aversion Experiences | Rakesh Patibanda
Research Portfolio

Research Project

GazeAway: Designing for Gaze Aversion Experiences

Embodied Interaction MotorHCI Extended Abstract
Year2024
VenueCHI EA '24
LocationHonolulu, HI, USA
Pages6 pages
GazeAway: Designing for Gaze Aversion Experiences

A prototype wearable that swings a screen into the wearer's field of vision precisely when they look away from something – the natural behaviour people do when thinking hard or recalling something. The project investigates how technology might support or change this everyday, unconscious bodily habit.

Gaze aversion is embedded in our behaviour: we look at a blank area to support remembering and creative thinking, and as a social cue that we are thinking. We hypothesise that a person's gaze aversion experience can be mediated through technology, in turn supporting embodied cognition. In this design exploration we present six ideas for interactive technologies that mediate the gaze aversion experience. One of these ideas we developed into “GazeAway”: a prototype that swings a screen into the wearer's field of vision when they perform gaze aversion. Six participants experienced the prototype and based on their interviews, we found that GazeAway changed their gaze aversion experience threefold: increased awareness of gaze aversion behaviour, novel cross-modal perception of gaze aversion behaviour, and changing gaze aversion behaviour to suit social interaction. We hope that ultimately, our design exploration offers a starting point for the design of gaze aversion experiences.

Nathalie Overdevest, Rakesh Patibanda, Aryan Saini, Elise Van Den Hoven, Florian ‘Floyd’ Mueller

NO
Nathalie Overdevest
RP
Rakesh Patibanda
AS
Aryan Saini
EV
Elise Van Den Hoven
Florian ‘Floyd’ Mueller