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Eye tracker

A Wisdom Archive on Eye tracker

Eye tracker

A selection of articles related to Eye tracker

More material related to Eye Tracker can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Eye Tracker
Eye movements, Eye movements - Extraocular muscles, Eye movements - Types, Eye movements - Yoked movements vs. antagnoistic movements, Eye tracker, Fixational eye movement, Microsaccade, Nystagmus, Ocular tremor, Ophthalmoparesis, Rapid eye movement, Saccade, Strabismus

ARTICLES RELATED TO Eye tracker

Eye tracker: Encyclopedia II - Gaze - Effects of gaze

Gazing and seeing someone gaze upon another provides us with a lot of information about our relationship to the subjects, or the relationships between the subjects upon whom we gaze, or the situation in which the subjects are doing the gazing. The mutuality of the gaze can reflect power structure, or the nature of a relationship between the subjects, as proposed by Catherine Lutz and Jane Collins, where this "tell[s] us who has the right and/or need to look at whom". Gazing can often reflect emotion without speech - in Western culture, continued staring upon another c ...

See also:

Gaze, Gaze - Forms of gaze, Gaze - Effects of gaze, Gaze - Gaze and feminist theory, Gaze - Responses to male gaze, Gaze - Gaze and psychology

Read more here: » Gaze: Encyclopedia II - Gaze - Effects of gaze

Eye tracker: Encyclopedia II - Eye movements - Yoked movements vs. antagnoistic movements

Eyes are the structural organs that contain the retina, a specialized type of brain tissue that contains the photoreceptors and interneurons that convert light into electrochemical signals that travel along the fibers of the optic nerve to the brain. The visual system in the brain is too slow to process that information if the images are slipping across the retina at more than a few degrees per second (Westheimer and McKee, 1954). Thus, to be able to see while we are moving, the brain must compensate for the motion of the head by turning the ...

See also:

Eye movements, Eye movements - Types, Eye movements - Yoked movements vs. antagnoistic movements, Eye movements - Extraocular muscles

Read more here: » Eye movements: Encyclopedia II - Eye movements - Yoked movements vs. antagnoistic movements

Eye tracker: Encyclopedia II - Gaze - Forms of gaze

The gaze can be characterized by who is doing the looking: the spectator's gaze: the spectator who is viewing the text. This is often us, the audience of a certain text, intra-diegetic gaze, where one person depicted in the text who is looking at another person or object in the text, such as another character looking at another, extra-diegetic gaze, where the person depicted in the text looks at the spectator, such as an aside, or an acknowledgement of the fourth wall, or the camera's gaze, which is the gaze of the ...

See also:

Gaze, Gaze - Forms of gaze, Gaze - Effects of gaze, Gaze - Gaze and feminist theory, Gaze - Responses to male gaze, Gaze - Gaze and psychology

Read more here: » Gaze: Encyclopedia II - Gaze - Forms of gaze

Eye tracker: Encyclopedia II - Eye movements - Extraocular muscles

Each eye has six muscles that control its movements: the lateral rectus, the medial rectus, the inferior rectus, the superior rectus, the inferior oblique, and the superior oblique. When the muscles exert different tensions, a torque is exerted on the globe that causes it to turn. This is an almost pure rotation, with only about one millimeter of translation (Carpenter, 1988). Thus, the eye can be considered as undergoing rotations about a ...

See also:

Eye movements, Eye movements - Types, Eye movements - Yoked movements vs. antagnoistic movements, Eye movements - Extraocular muscles

Read more here: » Eye movements: Encyclopedia II - Eye movements - Extraocular muscles

Eye tracker: Encyclopedia II - Eye movements - Types

Eye movements are typically classified as either ductions, versions, or vergences. Ductions - A duction is an eye movement involving only one eye. Versions - Versions are eye movements involving both eyes in which each eye moves in the same direction. Vergences - Vergences are eye movements involving both eyes in which each eye moves in opposite directions. ...

See also:

Eye movements, Eye movements - Types, Eye movements - Yoked movements vs. antagnoistic movements, Eye movements - Extraocular muscles

Read more here: » Eye movements: Encyclopedia II - Eye movements - Types

More material related to Eye Tracker can be found here:
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