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Computer: Input Device: Optical
dual-spectrum eye recognition   (+4)  [vote for, against]
Using infrared and visible light cameras to detect gaze

This is a system where a computer tries to guess where a person is looking by detecting their pupil. Now, the human pupil is black in visible light, but reflective in infrared. This system has two cameras, one visible and one infrared. It shines an infared source in front of the cameras. The imaging software tries to find patches of color that are black in one image and infrared in the other.
-- lawpoop, Feb 26 2009

One of the better systems on the market http://www.eyelinkinfo.com/index.php
+also tracks reflections of light on the cornea [loonquawl, Feb 26 2009]

Wikipedia: Eye tracking: Technologies and techniques http://en.wikipedia...gies_and_techniques
"Most modern eye-trackers use contrast to locate the center of the pupil and use infrared and near-infrared non-collimated light to create a corneal reflection (CR). The vector between these two features can be used to compute gaze intersection with a surface after a simple calibration for an individual." [jutta, Feb 26 2009]

That is exactly how video-based eyetrackers work.
-- loonquawl, Feb 26 2009


What about glasses or contact lenses?
-- nineteenthly, Feb 26 2009


contact lenses tend to spoof the (normally more exact) corneal reflection, because that relies on the slightly bent (relative to the eye) surface of the cornea, and the contact lenses, while having this curvature too, tend to slip around a little during fast eye movements.

The algorithm searching for the pupil (reflective round spot somewhere in the picture) is pretty robust, though. The infrared is ~800nm, so the glasses are not opaque to the wavelength (as some would be from 1000nm onwards)
-- loonquawl, Feb 26 2009



random, halfbakery