Han analyzes eye movements to integrate theories of phenomenological aesthetics with the psychology of perception.
Eye-tracking cameras allow researchers in the field of psychology to measure changes in a subject's eye movements and analyze how they process visual information. Eugene Han, an assistant professor of architecture, takes a different approach.
Han uses the cameras as a creative tool to analyze eye movements and visualize the different ways people see art and architecture. His eye-tracking studies have explored in a variety of ways how people look at, for example, images, sculptures and passages through building complexes.
Spotlight Recipient
Eugene Han
Associate professor, architecture