“…The mid-2000s to the mid-2010s saw a shift in focus from platform-specific [14,16,21] to web-based experimental apparatus, including interaction logging infrastructure that focused on examining the DOM. Examples of solutions from this period included MLogger [10], PooDLE [5], Search-Logger [18], Wrapper [13], UsaProxy [3,4], the framework by Hall and Toms [11], WHOSE [12], and YAS-FIIRE [20]. Some of these solutions required additional software to be installed (such as browser toolbars), while others made use of an intermediatary proxy server to inject logging code, as used in subsequent studies [2,6,7,15].…”