Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Indian-Origin MIT Researcher Develops Phone-based Eye-Tracking System

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Jun, 2016 11:56 AM
    Researchers led by an Indian-origin scientist have developed a software that can turn any smartphone into an eye-tracking device, a discovery that can help in psychological experiments and marketing research.
     
    In addition to making existing applications of eye-tracking technology more accessible, the system could enable new computer interfaces or help detect signs of incipient neurological disease or mental illness.
     
    Since few people have the external devices, there's no big incentive to develop applications for them. 
     
    “Since there are no applications, there's no incentive for people to buy the devices. We thought we should break this circle and try to make an eye tracker that works on a single mobile device, using just your front-facing camera,” explained Aditya Khosla, graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
     
    Khosla and his colleagues from MIT and University of Georgia built their eye tracker using machine learning, a technique in which computers learn to perform tasks by looking for patterns in large sets of training examples.
     
    Currently, Khosla says, their training set includes examples of gaze patterns from 1,500 mobile-device users. 
     
    Previously, the largest data sets used to train experimental eye-tracking systems had topped out at about 50 users.
     
    To assemble data sets, "most other groups tend to call people into the lab," Khosla says. 
     
    "It's really hard to scale that up. Calling 50 people in itself is already a fairly tedious process. But we realised we could do this through crowdsourcing,” he added.
     
    In the paper, the researchers report an initial round of experiments, using training data drawn from 800 mobile-device users. 
     
    On that basis, they were able to get the system's margin of error down to 1.5 centimetres, a twofold improvement over previous experimental systems.
     
    The researchers recruited application users through Amazon's Mechanical Turk crowdsourcing site and paid them a small fee for each successfully executed tap. The data set contains, on average, 1,600 images for each user.
     
    The team from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and the University of Georgia described their new system in a paper set to presented at the "Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition" conference in Las Vegas on June 28.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    NASA joins hunt for missing Malaysian jet

    NASA joins hunt for missing Malaysian jet
    The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has joined the search hunt for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight, which disappeared shortly after take-off from Kuala Lumpur airport.

    NASA joins hunt for missing Malaysian jet

    March 14 is World Sleep Day: Lack of sleep can cause heart disease

    March 14 is World Sleep Day: Lack of sleep can cause heart disease
    How you sleep is a major determinant of how well your heart functions. A new study carried out on cardiac patients at the Sir Gangaram Hospital here revealed that around 96 percent of patients who have cardiovascular problems have sleep apnea

    March 14 is World Sleep Day: Lack of sleep can cause heart disease

    Time to leave 'black box' for advanced technology

    Time to leave 'black box' for advanced technology
    At a time when a massive search is on to find the flight data recorder, or 'black box,' to know what happened to the missing Malaysia Airlines, experts believe it is right time to move over the good old 'black box' and adopt latest technology

    Time to leave 'black box' for advanced technology

    Take heart! Women equally good at maths

    Take heart! Women equally good at maths
    Do you often handle kids' maths assignments? Most of the men are given this task at home but a study says that even women are equally able when it comes to maths.

    Take heart! Women equally good at maths

    Revealed: How Twitter shapes public opinion

    Revealed: How Twitter shapes public opinion
    Since public opinion levels off and evolves into an ordered state within a short time, small advantages of one opinion in the early stages can turn into a bigger advantage during the evolution of public opinion

    Revealed: How Twitter shapes public opinion

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond
    Do you often play games, check emails or respond to office calls on your cell phone while with family on a dinner? This phone addiction can damage your emotional bonding with kids soon.

    Watch out! Cell phone addiction may kill parent-child bond