The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates

This review aims to reconcile the contradicting results on mental workload and eye blink rate (EBR). While a series of studies such as those by Holland and Tarlow (1972, 1975) showed that higher mental workload is reflected by higher EBR, others such as Wood and Hassett (1983) and Fukuda, Stern, Bro...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ng, Zhe Xi
Other Authors: Gerrit Maus
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76206
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-76206
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-762062019-12-10T12:57:35Z The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates Ng, Zhe Xi Gerrit Maus School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology This review aims to reconcile the contradicting results on mental workload and eye blink rate (EBR). While a series of studies such as those by Holland and Tarlow (1972, 1975) showed that higher mental workload is reflected by higher EBR, others such as Wood and Hassett (1983) and Fukuda, Stern, Brown, and Russo (2005) suggest otherwise. The emphasis of this review will be placed in the tasks employed in each study, which will be subsequently argued as the underlying factor for the conflicting results. Prior to the reviews, the basics on eye blinks will first be discussed to provide a physiological and neurological basis of argument. Subsequently, this paper will discuss the influence of stimuli modality and attention, referred to as nature of task in the paper, on the relationship between mental workload and EBR. In addition, this paper speculates the involvement of alpha power in playing a role in the interaction of stimuli modality and nature of task based on its involvement in similar neurological processes. Taken as a whole, the influence of alpha power is speculated to be the cause of EBR being context dependant. Specifically, higher mental workload will be reflected by lower EBR when visual stimuli is used. However, above a certain threshold, whereby mental workload is deemed too high, EBR will increase instead. Lastly, this paper concludes with the importance of understanding the relationship of EBR and mental workload by arguing its applicability in real-world scenarios, providing an applied function to the future research findings. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2018-11-29T05:49:14Z 2018-11-29T05:49:14Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76206 en 38 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Ng, Zhe Xi
The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
description This review aims to reconcile the contradicting results on mental workload and eye blink rate (EBR). While a series of studies such as those by Holland and Tarlow (1972, 1975) showed that higher mental workload is reflected by higher EBR, others such as Wood and Hassett (1983) and Fukuda, Stern, Brown, and Russo (2005) suggest otherwise. The emphasis of this review will be placed in the tasks employed in each study, which will be subsequently argued as the underlying factor for the conflicting results. Prior to the reviews, the basics on eye blinks will first be discussed to provide a physiological and neurological basis of argument. Subsequently, this paper will discuss the influence of stimuli modality and attention, referred to as nature of task in the paper, on the relationship between mental workload and EBR. In addition, this paper speculates the involvement of alpha power in playing a role in the interaction of stimuli modality and nature of task based on its involvement in similar neurological processes. Taken as a whole, the influence of alpha power is speculated to be the cause of EBR being context dependant. Specifically, higher mental workload will be reflected by lower EBR when visual stimuli is used. However, above a certain threshold, whereby mental workload is deemed too high, EBR will increase instead. Lastly, this paper concludes with the importance of understanding the relationship of EBR and mental workload by arguing its applicability in real-world scenarios, providing an applied function to the future research findings.
author2 Gerrit Maus
author_facet Gerrit Maus
Ng, Zhe Xi
format Final Year Project
author Ng, Zhe Xi
author_sort Ng, Zhe Xi
title The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
title_short The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
title_full The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
title_fullStr The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
title_full_unstemmed The art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
title_sort art of blinking : a review of stimuli modality and attention on blink rates
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76206
_version_ 1681041736593309696