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[news 2007
- 2008]
Long-range
eye tracker enables selling ads “by the eyeball”
Queen’s University spin-off Xuuk unveils technology
at Google
May 7, 2007
KINGSTON, Ont. – A Queen’s University Computing
professor’s invention – to be unveiled today
at Google’s corporate headquarters in California
– provides a unique, affordable way for advertisers
to track the effectiveness of their messages by measuring
how many people are looking at their billboards and
screens.
Called eyebox2™, the portable device uses a camera
that monitors eye movements in real time and automatically
detects when you are looking at it from up to 10 meters
away, without calibration. Until now, such eye-trackers
have been ineffective beyond 60 centimeters, required
people to remain stationary, needed personalized calibration
to function, and cost more than $25,000 US. By contrast,
the new walk-up-and-use eye sensor is offered at a fraction
of that cost.
“This camera mimics eye contact perception in
humans, allowing us to pinpoint quite accurately what
plasma screen or product shelf people are looking at,”
says Dr. Roel Vertegaal, director of the Human Media
Laboratory at Queen’s and inventor of the technology.
He is also CEO of Xuuk, Inc. a startup company that
he formed with PARTEQ Innovations, the technology transfer
office of Queen’s, to commercialize the technology.
The debut of eyebox2™ coincides with a new trend
in North America and Europe of “ambient”
advertising, using plasma display panels. While the
impact of Internet ads can be measured by the number
of hits on a web site, it is much harder to assess the
effectiveness of plasma screens that target people in
shopping malls, restaurants and other public places.
The Queen’s invention gives advertisers a tool
to accurately measure how much attention something receives,
whether on a plasma panel, a billboard, or as the result
of its placement on a supermarket shelf.
“Our technology allows interactive real-time “Flow
of Attention” measures of customers in the real
world. This allows ambient ads run in malls literally
to be sold ‘by the eyeball,” says Dr. Vertegaal.
“It enables brick-and-mortar stores such as Wal-Mart
and Sears to use a revenue model similar to Google’s
online PageRank and web analytics technologies.”
Dr. Vertegaal stresses that this technology is not an
additional form of surveillance, like closed-circuit
TV, but compares it instead to a simple door sensor
that detects whether people want to pass through. “The
door sensor doesn’t know who you are, and neither
does the eyebox2™ sensor,” he says. “It
is a passive technology that simply counts how many
people have been looking at a particular ad and for
how long, just like a door sensor observes whether people
might be interested in going through the doorway.”
As competition for a consumer’s attention intensifies,
this technology enables advertisers to assess interest
in their products in a complete transparent fashion,
and for considerably less cost than existing products,
says Dr. Vertegaal.
“We’ve been striving for the last 15 years
to make eye tracking a mass input device – as
useful and convenient as a mouse,” he adds. “Now
we have a growth market in advertising, and a product
that’s small enough, cheap enough, and able to
work at a much longer distance, and in walk-up-and-use
scenarios. I think it represents a real breakthrough
that will later on help people work better with computers
in ways currently that are unthinkable.”
Developed from their research into Attentive User Interfaces,
the technologies reflect a novel approach to human-computer
interactions. The focus of the research is on making
everyday devices more attentive to their users by “sensing”
when it is appropriate to interact with them. Today’s
presentation focuses on advertising applications, but
future potential uses include attentive computers, cellphones
and household appliances.
Contacts:
Dr. Roel Vertegaal
Associate Professor in Human-Computer Interaction, Queen’s
University
President and CEO, Xuuk, Inc.
P: 613. 484. 1113
E: roel@cs.queensu.ca
Davis Hill
Manager, Commercial Development
PARTEQ Innovations
P: 613. 533. 6000 ext. 78463
E: dhill@parteqinnovations.com
About Xuuk, Inc.:
Xuuk Inc. is a designer, manufacturer and marketer of
innovative sensing solutions. Through the development
of integrated hardware, software and service products,
xuuk provides attention sensing solutions for product
placement and ambient advertising analytics, as well
as for high-end appliance designs. www.xuuk.com
About PARTEQ Innovations:
PARTEQ Innovations is the not-for-profit technology
transfer office of Queen’s University. PARTEQ
works with researchers and the business and venture
capital communities to bring early stage technologies
to market. Since 1987 PARTEQ has been instrumental in
the establishment of nearly 40 companies developing
a variety of products, from potential drugs for Alzheimer’s,
cancer and heart disease to automated bacteria detection
for water systems, solar-powered appliances, and advanced
materials used in the plastics, automotive, aerospace
and household appliance industries. While primarily
focused on discoveries generated by Queen’s University,
PARTEQ also offers it services to the Royal Military
College of Canada, Kingston General Hospital, St. Lawrence
College and University of Toronto.
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