As the user reads text and images, fixations and saccades are recorded as an accurate picture of where the eyes travel and rest, creating a scan pattern of where they are looking, and where they are not. While typical tasks involve reading display monitors, eyetracking can also be used to record the eye movements of participants examining printed text and visual materials, engaging with products or product assembly tasks, and navigating environments. For example, eyetracking is used to highlight scanning and reading patterns during website navigation, using a parking kiosk pay system or vending machine, making adjustments or repairs to equipment or machinery, or finding one’s way through an unfamiliar building using signage and wayfinding cues. Equipment may vary depending on the task, with a preference for sense electrode technology for mobile recordings of daily life or environmental navigation.