In the US, web usability specialists Brian Krausz and Joe Gershenson have launched GazeHawk, a new technology firm which aims to make eye-tracking ‘affordable for everyone’.
Their Mountain View, California-based firm uses ordinary webcams combined with their own proprietary heat mapping software, and GazeHawk’s community of testers.
The pair have developed ‘bright pupil’ technology, in which an infrared beam is aimed at a user’s eye, and the reflections are measured to calculate the eye’s angle to a computer screen. From this angle, it is possible to determine which part of a web page the user is focusing on.
GazeHawk has set up a panel of several hundred testers who engage in client projects remotely from their own desktops.
Krausz and Gershenson claim that their service can be delivered at a tenth of the price of existing eye-tracking, with clients receiving a heatmap showing how the testers’ have interacted with their site for as little as $49 per web page.
Web site: www.gazehawk.com .