arXiv:2605.20211v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Educational videos are a cornerstone of remote and blended learning. However, learners’ fluctuating attention remains a significant barrier to effective information retention. Prior research has attempted to mitigate this by detecting and reacting to attention loss at runtime using eye tracking. Such detection has been based so far on classical machine learning classifiers trained on engineered features, such as summary statistics over learners’ fixations and saccades. These methods have struggled to capture the complex, temporal nature of learner engagement, thus exhibiting moderate prediction performance. In this study, we aim to advance the detection of attention by shifting from standard engineered features to a multimodal foundation models. Using an educational eye-tracking dataset (N = 70), we investigate a novel methodology that utilizes a Vision-Language Model (VLM) to analyze video content directly with superimposed gaze data. This approach aims to leverage the semantic reasoning capabilities of foundation models to contextualize learner focus within the video stream. We evaluate the performance of this VLM-based approach using several prompting strategies with Gemini 3, but ultimately found that none of them could outperform statistical baselines. Our results provide new insights into the limitations of using VLMs for real-time educational diagnostics.
Why digital health fails silently: a sociotechnical theory of health information technology–related risk
IntroductionHealth information technology (HIT) is now integral to healthcare delivery, supporting clinical documentation, prescribing, diagnostics, and care coordination. Although these technologies offer substantial benefits, they