Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
62 lines (37 loc) · 3.4 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

62 lines (37 loc) · 3.4 KB

The Evaluation Toolkit (etk)

Contact: Terry Turton [email protected] (primary developer)

Documentation: Please see the project Wiki.

The Evalution ToolKit is designed to automate image-based perceptual experiments. Developed under a DOE grant by the ECX Collaboration, this software is targeted at researchers in scientific visualization.

The software modules work within Qualtrics survey software. Each module consists of three scripts: a JavaScript, a CSS file and an HTML file that are added to a Qualtrics project/question. The researcher needs to minimally edit the code (e.g. changing the list of images and modifying some sizes to fit the images under study) to create a basic psychophysical experiment. Any necessary image randomization is automatically done within the JavaScript and output is via Qualtrics Embedded Data variables.

There are currently six modules which can be used for different types of psychophysical methods:

  • Two-alternative Forced Choice This compares a set of stimuli levels to a baseline; both the baseline and the stimuli images can come from an array of possible variants; each image in the comparison pair (baseline versus a stimuli level) will be randomly chosen from the respective set of variants.

  • Method of Adjustment This cycles through a "carousel" of images. The user can choose a threshold point.

  • Sliding Method of Adjustment This MoA variant shows two images as it rotates through the carousel of images, making it easier to see a threshold point.

  • Round Robin Comparison This compares all images pairwise; includes option for a set of validation images.

  • Compare 2 Arrays This compares images in two lists; can be used in a 2AFC type of experiment or to hardcode a subset of a round robin set of comparison.

  • Click Counting This counts the number of clicks on an image. Can be used for counting types of studies.

  • Key Task This shows a stimuli image with an array of 16 answer keys. The keys can be coded by name or by color.

Documentation

The etk Wiki has examples and demo surveys. Take a look!

Citation

If using an etk module in your work, please cite the following paper as reference:

Bibtex Citation: @inproceedings {Turton:eurovisshort.20171131, booktitle = {EuroVis 2017 - Short Papers}, editor = {Barbora Kozlikova and Tobias Schreck and Thomas Wischgoll}, title = {{ETK: An Evaluation Toolkit for Visualization User Studies}}, author = {Turton, Terece L. and Berres, Anne S. and Rogers, David H. and Ahrens, James}, year = {2017}, publisher = {The Eurographics Association}, ISBN = {978-3-03868-043-7}, DOI = {10.2312/eurovisshort.20171131} }

Acknowledgement

This material is based upon work supported by Dr. Lucy Nowell of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Advanced Scientific Computing Research under Award Numbers DE-AS52-06NA25396 and DE-SC-0012516. It is an artifact created for the ECX project (http://www.ecxproject.org)

License

This code is licensed under a BSD 3-Clause License. Copyright (c) 2016, University of Texas at Austin, Los Alamos National Laboratory. All rights reserved.

The icon for this project was downloaded from The Noun Project (www.nounproject.comr), and was created by Delwar Hossain.

Disclaimer

This project is no longer under active development. Links may have become obsolete.