towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement guru oct 1, 2001 jonathan nelson

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Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

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Page 1: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement

GURU Oct 1, 2001

Jonathan Nelson

Page 2: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Thanks especially to Wendy Ark Gary Cottrel Carrie Joyce Javier Movellan Marty Sereno Ruth Williams

Page 3: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Outline Function of eye movement in vision Traditional analyses of eye

movement Three papers using stochastic

processes to model eye movement Research towards a better

generative model

Page 4: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Why model eye movement? for cognitive science and economics: how do a person’s

knowledge and goals influence their information-gathering in perception? (applications also to entertainment and interface design)

for medical diagnosis: how does a physician/technician read an x-ray? Can we automate or assist the physician?

for understanding and treating pathological conditions: autism, williams’ syndrome. Can training appropriate eye movement help autistics in social situations?

for artificial perception: are the visual data that humans acquire also informative for active, sequential artificial vision systems?

Page 5: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Saccadic eye movement Eccentricity and image resolution Saccades and fixations Relationship to task, applications

Page 6: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Traditional analyses Large number of papers Inspired by behavioral statistics:

lose dynamic character, or dichotomize/polychotomize time

Yet unexplained qualitative results: “highly individual scanpaths” “high individual consistency from trial

to trial”

Page 7: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Towards a stochastic theory Regions of interest in an image Timescale

Page 8: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Regions of interest:

Page 9: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Regions of interest:

Page 10: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Regions of interest:

Page 11: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Regions of interest:

Page 12: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Timescale Discrete or continuous? Every point sampled by the eye

tracker? Every nth millisecond? Every fixation?

Page 13: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Timescale Nearby fixations grouped together Saccade points rejected

Page 14: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

What kind of SP? Discrete state, usually with regions

of interest that contain current point of gaze as state

Discrete time, with points of meaningful fixations forming the time step

Time-homogenous Markov chain

Page 15: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

White et al.: mammograms How do experts read

mammograms? Can experts’ patterns in reading

mammograms suggest means of computer aided diagnosis?

Page 16: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

from http://sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/mammography/imageanalysis.htm

Page 17: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

White et al.’s modeling One model per subject, per image A sequential clustering algorithm

to determine regions of interest Exclude transitions to same state,

and fixations outside of regions of interest

“Not enough data”

Page 18: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Joyce: face perception Goal: augment or corroborate

eyewitness testimony, using eye movement EEG GSR

Task: view a face recognize it as not novel, after a

delay

Page 19: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Task: “Study this face”

Page 20: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Task:

“Have you seenthis face before?”

Page 21: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Joyce’s regions of interest 10 ROI:

hair right eye nose etc.

Normalized faces Nearest neighbor

Page 22: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Joyce’s model Markov States: each of 10 regions of

interest Time: from entering region till

leaving region is one discrete step

Page 23: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Joyce’s results More entropy in saccade

sequences when viewing a novel face

Matches qualitative findings

Page 24: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Eye-typing: Salvucci Goal: have users type a pre-

selected word, by looking at an on-screen keyboard

Models used: saccade or fixation HMM letter HMM grammar

Page 25: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Saccade-fixation HMM If previous time is fixation, current time is most likely

fixation If low velocity, current time most likely fixation “Standard HMM parameter estimation” (Rabiner, 1989) Viterbi to optimize

Page 26: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Fixations and centroids

Page 27: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

“Centroid submodel HMM” States:

peaked bivariate distribution for (x, y)

diffuse bivariate distribution for (x, y)

Page 28: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Grammar for words Which word gives the highest

likelihood of the centroid data?

Page 29: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Results 92% accuracy with 1000 word vocabulary too computationally intensive for realistic-size

(e.g. 50,000 words) vocabulary, for next few years

… a nice proof of concept (previous systems required >750ms between

fixations, and 4 degrees between targets) (for simpler multiple-letter models, use a

string-edit distance algorithm to find the nearest vocabulary word)

Page 30: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Future work More temporal dependence: try

3rd+ order model Can a sophisticated string-edit

distance algorithm correct for bias in limited sampling?

Page 31: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Future work Systematic exploration of time index Improvement of saccade-fixation HMM Distribution of fixations within regions What is the nature of individual

differences? Relationship of knowledge and goals to

task

Page 32: Towards a stochastic theory of saccadic eye movement GURU Oct 1, 2001 Jonathan Nelson

Sources Cited White, KP; Hutson, TL; Hutchinson, TE (1997). Modeling

human eye behavior during mammographic scanning: preliminary results. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics, A, 27, 494-505.

Salvucci, DD (1999). Inferring intent in eye-based interfaces: tracing eye movements with process models. Proceedings of the 1999 Computer Human Interaction Conference.

Joyce, CA (2000). Saving Faces: Using Eye Movement, ERP, and SCR Measures of Face Processing and Recognition to Investigate Eyewitness Identification. Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, San Diego.