Abstract

We describe a system designed to monitor the gaze of a user working naturally at a computer workstation. The system consists of three cameras situated between the keyboard and the monitor. Free head movements are allowed within a three-dimensional volume approximately 40 centimeters in diameter. Two fixed, wide-field face cameras equipped with active-illumination systems enable rapid localization of the subject's pupils. A third steerable eye camera has a relatively narrow field of view, and acquires the images of the eyes which are used for gaze estimation. Unlike previous approaches which construct an explicit three-dimensional representation of the subject's head and eye, we derive mappings for steering control and gaze estimation using a procedure we call implicit calibration. Implicit calibration is performed by collecting a training of parameters and associated measurements, and solving for a set of coefficients relating the measurements back to the parameters of interest. Preliminary data on three subjects indicate an median gaze estimation error of ap-proximately 0.8 degree.

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