4.5 Article

Tracking gaze position from EEG: Exploring the possibility of an EEG-based virtual eye-tracker

Journal

BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/brb3.3205

Keywords

BSS; eye movement; high-density EEG; ICA; saccade; SOBI; smooth pursuit

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This study presents a novel method for tracking eye movement using EEG signals, making it easier to study the neural mechanisms underlying natural cognition in the context of free eye movement.
Introduction: Ocular artifact has long been viewed as an impediment to the interpretation of electroencephalogram (EEG) signals in basic and applied research. Today, the use of blind source separation (BSS) methods, including independent component analysis (ICA) and second-order blind identification (SOBI), is considered an essential step in improving the quality of neural signals. Recently, we introduced amethod consisting of SOBI and a discriminant and similarity (DANS)-based identification method, capable of identifying and extracting eye movement-related components. These recovered components can be localized within ocular structures with a high goodness of fit (>95%). This raised the possibility that such EEG-derived SOBI components may be used to build predictive models for tracking gaze position. Methods: As proof of this new concept, we designed an EEG-based virtual eye-tracker (EEG-VET) for tracking eye movement from EEG alone. The EEG-VET is composed of a SOBI algorithm for separating EEG signals into different components, a DANS algorithm for automatically identifying ocular components, and a linear model to transfer ocular components into gaze positions. Results: The prototype of EEG-VET achieved an accuracy of 0.920 degrees and precision of 1.510 degrees of a visual angle in the best participant, whereas an average accuracy of 1.008 degrees +/- 0.357 degrees and a precision of 2.348 degrees +/- 0.580 degrees of a visual angle across all participants (N = 18). Conclusion: This work offers a novel approach that readily co-registers eye movement and neural signals from a single-EEG recording, thus increasing the ease of studying neural mechanisms underlying natural cognition in the context of free eye movement.

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