Eye Tracking & Gaze Control for Assistive Technology
Project Overview
This project explores how eye tracking and gaze control can support users with limited motor abilities in interacting with digital systems. The project will investigate gaze-based selection, dwell time control, and visual attention patterns to design a more accessible interface for communication, browsing, or simple task completion.
Research Aim
To evaluate how eye tracking can be used as an alternative input method for assistive technology and to identify design principles that improve accuracy, usability, and user comfort.
Proposed Methodology
Students will review existing eye tracking applications in assistive technology, design a simple gaze-controlled prototype, and conduct a small usability evaluation with simulated users or available participants. Measures may include selection accuracy, task completion time, user workload, and perceived ease of use.
Expected Deliverables
A working low-fidelity or functional prototype, a usability evaluation report, interface design guidelines, and a final research poster.
Project Media
