Analyzing Gaze Behavior Using Object Detection and Unsupervised Clustering.

2020 
Gaze behavior is important in early development, and atypical gaze behavior is among the first symptoms of autism. Here we describe a system that quantitatively assesses gaze behavior using eye-tracking glasses. Objects in the subject’s field of view are detected using a deep learning model on the video captured by the glasses’ world-view camera, and a stationary frame of reference is estimated using the positions of the detected objects. The gaze positions relative to the new frame of reference are subjected to unsupervised clustering to obtain the time sequence of looks. The clustering method increases the accuracy of look detection on test videos compared against a previous algorithm, and is considerably more robust on videos with poor calibration.
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