Abstract

Eye movement data may be used for many various purposes. In most cases it is utilized to estimate a gaze point - that is a place where a person is looking at. Most devices registering eye movements, called eye trackers, return information about relative position of an eye, without information about a gaze point. To obtain this information, it is necessary to build a function that maps output from an eye tracker to horizontal and vertical coordinates of a gaze point. Usually eye movement is recorded when a user tracks a group of stimuli being a set of points displayed on a screen. The paper analyzes possible scenarios of such stimulus presentation and discuses an influence of usage of five different regression functions and two different head mounted eye trackers on the results.

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