20170041_0021

© Claire-Lise HAVET / IRHIS / CNRS Images

Reference

20170041_0021

Analyse des résultats du système oculométrique (« eye-tracking ») Pupil Labs

Laurent Sparrow, a research scientist at the SCALab laboratory, analyses the results of experiments using the Pupil Labs eye-tracking system in front of the Mathieu Le Nain painting "The Denial of Saint Peter" (circa 1655). Eye-tracking is a technique for recording eye movements that involves detecting, in real-time and with high spatial and temporal accuracy, the position of the gaze using a video camera. Initially developed for treating post-traumatic stress disorder, this innovation is now being used by museums to better understand responses to artworks. This device is combined with a wristband that records heart rate and electrical activity in order to assess the degree of emotion felt by a visitor in front of an artwork. Pupil Labs was developed by MIT students and forms part of the VISUALL-tek project, a library of tools that enables the collective examination of images. These apps are the result of an interdisciplinary dialogue between social science researchers and computer scientists specialising in human-machine interaction.

Research program(s)

Regional office(s)

CNRS Images,

Our work is guided by the way scientists question the world around them and we translate their research into images to help people to understand the world better and to awaken their curiosity and wonderment.