Abstract
Eye movements offer precious information about persons? state. Video surveillance, marketing, driver fatigue as well as medical diagnosis assistance applications manage eye behavior. We propose a new method for efficiently detecting eye movement. In this paper, we combine circle eye model with eye feature method to improve the accuracy. A set of detectors estimate the eyes centers to increase the localization rate. As a pre-processing stage, the mean of the edges yields the center of the two eye regions. Image treatment operations reduce the ROI. A Circle Hough Transform (CHT) algorithm is adopted in a modified version as a detector to find the circle eye in the image; the circle center found represents the eye's pupil estimation. We introduced the Maximally Stable Extremal Region (MSER) as a second detector, which has never been used for eye localization. Invariant to continuous geometric transformations and affine intensity changes and detected at several scales, MSERs efficiently detect regions of interest, in our case eye regions, and precisely, their centers. Ellipses fit MSERs, and their centroid estimation match eyes center. We demonstrate that the true eye centers can be found by combining these methods. The validation of the proposed method is performed on a very challenging BioID base. The proposed approach compares well with existing state-of-the-art techniques and achieves an accuracy of 82.53% on the BioID database when the normalized error is less than 0.05, without prior knowledge or any learning model.
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