Personal tools

Difference between revisions of "Eye tracking"

From iis-projects

Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
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 affected the eye and its movements through the lever. The American psychologist Raymond Dodge introduce 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.  
+
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).
 
Current methods include "videotaping" the eye (videooculography), magnetic coils (search coils), infrared reflections (limbustracking, dual-purkinje imaging) and skin electrodes (electrooculography).
  

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.