New publication on merging virtual reality-based eye-tracking with geographic information systems!

Published 23 September 2024
person seen in profile from the left, looking slightly up and wearing VR-headset, in the background a large screen

A groundbreaking study by Danilo Marco Campanaro and Giacomo Landeschi in the American Journal of Archaeology leverages virtual reality eye-tracking and GIS to explore how Roman homeowners manipulated visual perception to shape social identity.

In their latest article published in the American Journal of Archaeology, Danilo Marco Campanaro and Giacomo Landeschi introduce a novel methodology that merges virtual reality-based eye-tracking with geographic information systems. Their research investigates how visual perception within Roman houses, specifically in Pompeii's House of the Greek Epigrams, was likely manipulated through architectural design, movement, and lighting to shape social identity. This innovative study challenges the limitations of traditional archaeological methods, offering a new perspective on how space and perception were deliberately engineered in Roman domestic environments.
 

Read the full article in the American Journal of Archaeology
 

The above is a news article from darklab.lu.se

Danilo Marco Campanaro and Giacomo Landeschi, Visual Experience in a Pompeian Domestic Space: Analysis Using Virtual Reality-Based Eye Tracking and GIS, American Journal of Archaeology, 2024 128:4, 553-573. doi.org/10.1086/731330