Personal tools

Difference between revisions of "Eye tracking"

From iis-projects

Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "Eye tracking is the technique of recording eye movements. This can be achieved by "videotaping" the eye (videooculography), with magnetic coils (search coi...")
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Eye tracking is the technique of recording [[Eye movements | eye movements]]. This can be achieved by "videotaping" the eye (videooculography), with magnetic coils (search coils), through infrared reflections (limbustracking, dual-purkinje imaging) and with skin electrodes (electrooculography). The interested reader is referred to the review [http://www.karger.com/Article/Abstract/100347 "Eye Movement Recordings: Methods"] by T. Eggert.
+
Eye tracking is the technique of recording [[Eye movements | eye movements]]. One of the first successful visualization attempts used a kymograph and a lever construction connected to a contact lens made of plaster-of-Paris. Obviously, this is not the most pleasant recording technique since it affects the eye and its movements through the lever. The American psychologist Raymond Dodge introduced the first contact-free eye tracker which was able to record horizontal eye movements on a photosensitive plate. Since then eye movement research gained a lot of momentum with new methods, which have made eye tracking an inexpensive and easy-to-use technique.
 +
Current methods include "videotaping" the eye (videooculography), magnetic coils (search coils), infrared reflections (limbustracking, dual-purkinje imaging) and skin electrodes (electrooculography).
 +
 
 +
The interested reader is referred to the review [http://www.karger.com/Article/Abstract/100347 "Eye Movement Recordings: Methods"] by T. Eggert.
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Eye movements]]
 +
[[Category:Eye tracking]]

Latest revision as of 17:43, 31 August 2016

Eye tracking is the technique of recording eye movements. One of the first successful visualization attempts used a kymograph and a lever construction connected to a contact lens made of plaster-of-Paris. Obviously, this is not the most pleasant recording technique since it affects the eye and its movements through the lever. The American psychologist Raymond Dodge introduced the first contact-free eye tracker which was able to record horizontal eye movements on a photosensitive plate. Since then eye movement research gained a lot of momentum with new methods, which have made eye tracking an inexpensive and easy-to-use technique. Current methods include "videotaping" the eye (videooculography), magnetic coils (search coils), infrared reflections (limbustracking, dual-purkinje imaging) and skin electrodes (electrooculography).

The interested reader is referred to the review "Eye Movement Recordings: Methods" by T. Eggert.