survey of eye tracking techniques

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Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques Observable (Quantifiable) Eye Movements Covert Information Processing PSYC 736 – Spring 2006

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PSYC 736 – Spring 2006. Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques. Observable (Quantifiable) Eye Movements. Covert Information Processing. Introduction. Acuity as a function of retinal location. Visual acuity drops off rapidly from the fovea to the visual periphery as shown in this figure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Observable(Quantifiable)

Eye MovementsCovert

Information Processing

PSYC 736 – Spring 2006

Page 2: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Introduction

Page 3: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Acuity as a function of retinal location

Visual acuity drops off rapidly from the fovea to the visual periphery as shown in thisfigure.

The best visual acuity is found in a parafoveal area of 1-4 degrees from the fovea. (adapted from Schmidt and Connolly, 1966)

Page 4: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Photographic Simulation ofVariable Retinal Spatial Resolution

Courtesy of Stuart Anstis

Page 5: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

To process visual detail we must move our eye balls so that we aim them in such a way that we get the greatest resolution which is in the fovea.

Anatomy of the human eye ballThe muscles of the eye, 1) superior rectus muscle, 2) inferior rectus muscle, 3) lateral rectus muscle (lateral rectus muscle lies symmetrically opposite), 4) superior oblique muscle, 5) inferior oblique muscle. (adapted from Yarbus, Eye movements and vision, page 13)

Page 6: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Reproduction of Levitan’s picture “The Flood” shown to five observers for free examination, and graph of the distribution of 2000 drifts in accordance with their duration. Abscissas-duration of the drifts; ordinate-number of drifts of approximately equal duration. (adapted from Yarbus, Eye Movements, page 111)

Page 7: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Usually an eye fixation takes about 0.4 seconds (2.5 fixations/second)

60*2.5=150 eye fixations/minute

60*150=9000 eye fixations/hour

16*9000=144000 eye fixations/day

144000 is an average number of eye fixations per day or a number of visual details processed per day

Usually the brain processes all visual information taken during a fixation and initiates the execution of the any action, if any execution is required. If too much information or uncertainty is present, then another fixation is necessary.

Page 8: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Eye Tracking Techniques

• Electrooculography (EOG)

• Contact Lens Techniques a. Scleral coil b. Mirror reflector

• Limbus Tracker

• Video-based Pupil/Corneal Reflection

• Dual Purkinje Image

• Subjective Video Analysis

Page 9: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Electrooculogram (EOG)

-Exploits “dipole” nature of eyeball (retina is negative re: cornea)-DC amplification (hence, “drift” problems)-Two pairs of electrodes (horz v. vertical) plus ground references-High temporal resolution (continuous)-Poor spatial resolution and/or accuracy

Page 10: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Scleral Search Coil

-based on current flow through induction loop-good temporal resolution (pulsed; 1000 Hz)-supreme spatial resolution (< 10 arcsec)-uncomfortable-easily accommodates animal research

Page 11: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Scleral Mirror(Yarbus, 1967)

-suction cup mounted mirror reflects optical reference beam-significant inertial mass-goods temporal resolution-moderate spatial accuracy (1 deg)-extremely uncomfortable-requires anesthesia-very brief sampling epochs only-head immobilization required

Page 12: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Limbus Tracker

-based upon differential reflectance of sclera and iris-high temporal resolution (< 1000 Hz)-poor spatial accuracy -very limited operating range 10 deg horizontal EMs only

Page 13: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Corneal Reflection Technique(s)

Dark Pupil

Bright Pupil(Coaxial IR Illumination)

-based on real-time image processing to recognize and localize pupil and corneal reflection-IR illuminator required-temporal resolution depends upon eye camera frame rate (60, 120, 240, 500 Hz)-moderate spatial accuracy (< 1 deg)-bright pupil (robust) versus dark pupil (daylight)-head mounted vs. remote optics

Page 14: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

ASL Model 501(USD Vision Lab)

- head-mounted optics- bright pupil- single corneal reflection- visor-based coordinates

- world-coordinates available via optional head tracker and stationary scene camera

- 60 Hz (240 Hz optional available)

Page 15: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Corneal Reflections/Calibration

Page 16: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Measuring DriverEye Movement Behavior

ASL Model ETS-PC:(USD Vision Lab)

-dark pupil (day/night operation)-remote optics with “smart” pan/tilt-dual corneal reflections (CR)-wide field-of-view (60-75 deg)-world coordinates (stationary scene camera)-60 Hz (high speed option not available)

Page 17: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

USDInstrumented

Research Vehicle

Page 18: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

ASL ETS-PCDriver Eye Tracking System

Infrared Illuminators(source of corneal reflections)

Hidden Eye Tracker Optics

Page 19: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Hidden Eye Tracker Optics

Page 20: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Eye Tracker Operator(Rear Seat)

Page 21: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Test Driver

Page 22: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques
Page 23: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Corneal Reflections/Calibration

Page 24: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Some Examplesof

Driver Eye Movement Records

Page 25: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

SD HWY 50 West

Page 26: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Main Street - Vermillion

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Cherry StreetSlow Moving Vehicle

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Saccade Detection Latency ComparisonASL 501 versus Limbus Tracker(Gaze Contingent Eye Tracking)

Courtesy of Jochen Triesch, UCSD

Page 29: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Head-mounted Display (VR)

Courtesy of Jochen Triesch, UCSD

Page 30: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Dual Purkinje Eye Tracker

-based upon alignment (parallax) of Purkinje images I and IV-excellent spatial resolution and accuracy (< 1 minarc)-uncomfortable (requires bite bar)-”Gold standard” for human lab psychophysical studies

Courtesy of Jochen Triesch, UCSD

Page 31: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Subjective Localization of Gaze(Frame-by-frame Video Analysis)

Schieber, et al., 1997

Accuracy MapSubjective Estimation of In-Vehicle Gaze Position

(Camera position: 65-deg from L.O.S)

Page 32: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Older Driver Performance MetricsInternet-in-the-Car (Driver Distraction)

video clip next screen

Page 33: Survey of Eye Tracking Techniques

Older Driver Performance MetricsInternet-in-the-Car (Driver Distraction)

(click to start video clip)