Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience (Dec 2021)

EyeLoop: An Open-Source System for High-Speed, Closed-Loop Eye-Tracking

  • Simon Arvin,
  • Rune Nguyen Rasmussen,
  • Keisuke Yonehara,
  • Keisuke Yonehara,
  • Keisuke Yonehara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2021.779628
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Eye-trackers are widely used to study nervous system dynamics and neuropathology. Despite this broad utility, eye-tracking remains expensive, hardware-intensive, and proprietary, limiting its use to high-resource facilities. It also does not easily allow for real-time analysis and closed-loop design to link eye movements to neural activity. To address these issues, we developed an open-source eye-tracker – EyeLoop – that uses a highly efficient vectorized pupil detection method to provide uninterrupted tracking and fast online analysis with high accuracy on par with popular eye tracking modules, such as DeepLabCut. This Python-based software easily integrates custom functions using code modules, tracks a multitude of eyes, including in rodents, humans, and non-human primates, and operates at more than 1,000 frames per second on consumer-grade hardware. In this paper, we demonstrate EyeLoop’s utility in an open-loop experiment and in biomedical disease identification, two common applications of eye-tracking. With a remarkably low cost and minimum setup steps, EyeLoop makes high-speed eye-tracking widely accessible.

Keywords