Developing visual expertise in software engineering: An eye tracking study




Markus Nivala, Florian Hauser, Jürgen Mottok, Hans Gruber

ieee

IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)

2016

IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference

Proceedings of 2016 IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)

613

620

8

978-1-4673-8633-3

2165-9559

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1109/EDUCON.2016.7474614(external)



Program comprehension and the ability to find program errors are key skills of software engineering. The aim of this pilot study was to examine the visual processes of novice and advanced programmers in authentic tasks. Fifteen novices and eight advanced programmers were given eight short pieces of code. Their task was to either identify an error or give the output of the code. Eye movements and keyboard activity were recorded. On average, the novices spent more time reading the code than composing the response, whereas the more advanced programmers started composing the response sooner and spent more time on it. In general, the advanced programmers had shorter fixations and saccades. The results suggest that the advanced programmers are quicker to grasp the essence of the code and able to see more details in it. The advanced programmers had shorter fixations and saccade lengths during the second phase which might indicate the process of chunking.



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