
© Claire-Lise HAVET / IRHIS / CNRS Photothèque
Analyse des résultats du système oculométrique (« eye-tracking ») Pupil Labs
Reference
20170041_0021
Production year
2017
Max. size
47.9 x 31.93 cm / 300 dpi
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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.