Tobii Pro Glasses 2: Eye Tracking Research In The Field (Update: New Hardware)

Update, 3/23/18, 7:08pm PT: Tobii Pro announced two new versions of its Glasses 2 spectacles, both of which are designed for sports and workplace research. The Glasses Pro Helmet Edition is designed to fit under helmets and facemasks of various sorts, so they don't impair workers or athletes' vision. Taking things a step further is the Glasses 2 Integrated Edition that's meant to fit into "advanced helmet systems and face protection systems." Basically, the Integrated Edition lacks lenses and earpieces, leaving the business end of the glasses connected to the camera and sensors via a flexible cable, which makes it easier to build it into existing head and face gear.  

Original article, 2/8/17, 5am PT:

Often, the next great bump in consumer or enthusiast technology comes from a lab that has entirely different goals in mind. Such is the case with the research wing of eye tracking company Tobii, which recently announced what it calls its most advanced eye tracker to date, the Tobii Pro Glasses 2.

At CES 2017, I met with Mike Bartels, Tobii Senior Research Director, Insight Services, to get a demo of the spectacles and get a glimpse into the research they provide. As sometimes happens at CES, I met with Bartels in a bustling mall of restaurants within a casino, and we made our way to a quiet hallway in a far wing of the facility to talk and, er, look.

Into The Real World

Tobii is a multifaceted company; we’ve written much about what it’s doing in the gaming world, including using eye tracking as a navigation tool for standard PC gaming and leveraging it for foveated rendering in both PC gaming and virtual reality (VR) environments. However, we’ve also looked at its efforts in the world of research: its Tobii Pro Spectrum kit is essentially a lab tool that helps researchers learn about human beings from their eye and head movements paired with other biometric data.

The Tobii Pro Glasses 2 is effectively a way to take some of the human behavior research out of the lab and into the real world.

Simply put, a subject dons the spectacles and walks around, looking at things, while a researcher hangs back and watches a live video feed from the glasses on a laptop. The glasses’ hardware tracks all of the wearer’s eye movements, and the laptop’s software uses that data to map everywhere that person looks.

For example, if you’re a grocer and want to know the optimal placement for certain products on your shelves, you could send Pro Glasses 2-wearing subjects into your stores, and in little more time than it takes a person to complete a stroll down the store’s aisles, you would get a look at where the subject’s eyes landed, when, and for how long.

How It Works

The aluminum, plastic, and stainless steel frame of the Pro Glasses 2 is essentially one piece that runs from ear to ear with a pair of lenses stuck to the front. The middle portion, between your eyes, contains a wide-angle camera that can shoot 1080p HD at 25FPS with a 90-degree field of view (FoV), a microphone, and a gyro and accelerometer.

Ringing the inside of the lenses is a bank of IR sensors, IR illuminators, and eye-tracking cameras. (This is where the magic happens.) “What you have here is an infrared light source that illuminates the eye, and super-small high-speed cameras that take 100 pictures of your eye every second,” said Bartels. Then, the sensors inside the frame track your gaze and plot that onto the camera’s view.

That data is fed into a small recording unit that loops onto your belt. The device is primarily for storage--it comes with a 32GB SD card--but it also processes the eye data. “This is where the magic happens of marrying the eye data with the synced camera video,” said Bartels. That 32GB may not sound like much, but the eye tracking produces a surprisingly small amount of data. “It tends to be about half an hour of data per gigabyte,” Bartels told me.

The system connects to a PC--in the field, usually a laptop or Windows tablet--so the researcher can see what the subject is seeing, all in essentially real time. (There is a small lag to the video feed, but that’s inconsequential in this case, because the subject never sees their own live video.)

There are three ways for the glasses and recording unit to connect to the PC:

Via a Wi-Fi signal the device createsVia any available wireless network (which may be advantageous when the subject needs to move distances beyond 50 feet or so)Tethered to the PC via a LAN cable

If you lose that connection, though, despair not; the data is still being recorded locally on the hip-mounted device. All you lose is the ability for the researcher to keep an eye on things in real-time. The data remains intact and available later.

The Demo

At this point in the article, we’d normally expend some digital ink describing the experience of the demo. However, there’s really nothing to describe: I put on the glasses and looked around, and my data was pumped to Bartel’s laptop. That’s it. And that’s the point: It’s designed to distract the subject as little as possible while collecting as much data as possible.

There is a quick calibration to set you up as a subject, but you just aim the glasses at a dot on a card for a few seconds, and off you go. “Typically, [calibration is] a dot on a screen that you have the person follow around with their eyes. In this case, it’s just a one-point calibration,” Bartels noted. He added that calibration takes between 5-15 seconds.

The Pro Glasses 2 were light on my face--hardly any heavier, it seemed, than my own glasses. I did have to remove my glasses before using the Pro Glasses 2, though. There are a couple of ways around this: One, obviously, is that you can just wear contact lenses, but for blind, bespectacled nerds like me, Tobii has a prescription lens kit. You can just swap out the non-prescription plastic lenses on the device for ones that have your prescription, and away you go.

Software Analytics

There is, of course, a software analytics component to all of this, in the form of Tobii Pro Lab software. You can see what the subject is looking at in real time, and that’s helpful, but that basically just provides anecdotal data. For example, if you created a new ad display for your store, you can sit there and watch how subjects look (or don’t look) at the display. You can also go back and view the full video recording at a later time.

For any frame of the video recording, though, you can take a still and have the software superimpose a “heat map” on top of it that shows where the subject’s eyes traveled and for how long. That’s still a bit lacking, though, because it is after all just a snapshot of a moment; so the software also gives you all the eye tracking metrics, so you can quantify everything and get a more comprehensive overview of the performance.

Eye Tracking, Soon To Be Indispensable

For researchers, eye tracking offers new ways to understand human behavior, which will benefit marketers, sure, but also those who are looking for ways to make people’s lives better. For gaming and VR enthusiasts, eye tracking holds a great deal of promise for a new level of control and immersion.

There is little debate that eye tracking is going to become a key component in VR, AR, and MR devices. There are a few companies making waves in that space, including SensoMotoric Instruments (SMI) (notably with its recent attachment to Qualcomm), EyeTech Systems and Quantum Interface, and EyeTribe, which was recently acquired by Oculus. All present some advantage over other solutions, but arguably Tobii’s best asset is its diversity.  

Tobii is actively working on eye tracking on multiple fronts. It has in-the-lab solutions, out-of-the-lab tools, and multiple gaming-oriented products, and they’re available for purchase. You can check out products from the gaming wing of the company here, and the Pro products are all here, including the Tobii Pro Spectrum kit.

Tobii offers three different kits for the Pro Glasses 2. The Tobii Pro Glasses 2 “Live View” kit has everything most people should need, including the glasses, recording unit, batteries, SD cards, cables, cords, calibration stimuli, and a tablet PC. The “Live View Wireless” kit offers the same, but with wireless functionality so subjects can roam free and untethered. The “Premium” kit offers all of the above as well as the data analytics software, technical support, and a remote training session. (Short of having the software, you can have Tobii’s Pro Insight Research Services team analyze the captured data and generate reports.)

You can also purchase the above in pieces, a la carte.

The Pro Glasses 2 start at $10,000, if you wish to conduct your own research, but you can hire Tobii to run a project for you, too. The latter has a typical cost range of $10,000-$30,000.

  • dstarr3
    This tech is very impressive, the products that have already made it to market reportedly work very well, and this is HUGELY beneficial to those with various disabilities.

    But boy, are they having a hard time figuring out why people who don't need this should want and buy it. I understand that they need to push this into the mainstream market if they want an honest shot at making money, but it's very much a solution seeking a problem in a lot of cases.
    Reply
  • bit_user
    19269885 said:
    But boy, are they having a hard time figuring out why people who don't need this should want and buy it. I understand that they need to push this into the mainstream market if they want an honest shot at making money, but it's very much a solution seeking a problem in a lot of cases.
    For VR and AR, it's not only a performance optimization, but also a potent user interface component.

    In the case of AR, that's going to be even more important. When you're walking around, you might not have your hands free, for gestural interfaces (or don't want to be seen pointing around).

    The problem is that they need to hang on, until the market catches up. They're probably hoping to get bought by someone like Apple, Samsung, Facebook, or Microsoft. Perhaps the retail market research service was done partly as a pitch to Google, though I'm sure they're twice shy about the prospect of Glass 2.
    Reply
  • scolaner
    19269885 said:
    This tech is very impressive, the products that have already made it to market reportedly work very well, and this is HUGELY beneficial to those with various disabilities.

    But boy, are they having a hard time figuring out why people who don't need this should want and buy it. I understand that they need to push this into the mainstream market if they want an honest shot at making money, but it's very much a solution seeking a problem in a lot of cases.

    I don't know their financials, but this is not a "hey here's some cool tech, maybe it will catch on play." This is a real thing that works, and it's been designed for research. They make money when companies/institutions buy the gear or pay Tobii to conduct their studies. (See the end, where I mentioned pricing.)

    But I do think that this sort of application could certainly be adapted for the mainstream market.
    Reply
  • scolaner
    19272260 said:
    They're probably hoping to get bought by someone like Apple, Samsung, Facebook, or Microsoft. Perhaps the retail market research service was done partly as a pitch to Google, though I'm sure they're twice shy about the prospect of Glass 2.

    I don't think that's the case. Tobii is actually a fairly large company with multiple wings and an international presence. I think they're hoping to license their tech to everyone. And also keep up their research business.
    Reply