July 5th, 2007 - Eye Tracking Article in Wired

Well, it’s a short news piece, but nonetheless my first byline in Wired News:

http://www.wired.com/gadgets/miscellaneous/news/2007/06/eyetracking

It’s about a pretty interesting eye tracking device developed at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario. It helps advertisers understand when media is getting noticed by tracking the presence of the “red-eye” effect in the images it records.

7 Responses to “Eye Tracking Article in Wired”

  1. Robert Barlow-Busch Says:

    Grats, Dan. Nice to see your byline in Wired News. Interesting article too — as are the comments questioning the privacy issues around more cameras in the public space.

  2. Daniel Says:

    I couldn’t understand some parts of this article , but I guess I just need to check some more resources regarding this, because it sounds interesting.

  3. Shaun Says:

    Definitely interesting. I have heard about the eyetracking devices used to track eye movements for on screen computer ads, but this is news to me. I agree that this may impose privacy issues, or at least it should. Seems like corporations will stop at nothing to extract every last penny out of every consumer on the planet.

  4. Tony Lindskog Says:

    Very interesting technology and article but the the cameras are not cameras per se from what I gather, they are more like scanners counting the number of looks/glances an advertising media is getting.

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