From George:
Please find bellow some references:
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- A paper on wearable eye tracking. You may be able to find more references, but this is a good starting point
and a quite extensive thesis with a lot of information on eye tracking (among other irrelevant material)
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- The following are related to the last part of your project, when your 3D eye tracking and basic 3D object tracking are in place.
These are interesting from a technical point of view (should open the full papers from these links on IC computer):
With a useful presentationhttp://www.geo.uzh.ch/microsite/icacogvis/pdf/icc2013/Kurzhals.pdf
And these are interesting from a clinical point of view, although a screen-based eye-tracker is in use here and also the context is slightly different to what you are trying to achieve:
Sodergren MH, Orihuela-Espina F, Mountney P, Clark J, Teare J, Darzi A, Yang GZ.
Ann Surg. 2011 Aug;254(2):257-66. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e31822513c6.
Sodergren MH, Orihuela-Espina F, Clark J, Teare J, Yang GZ, Darzi A.
Ann Surg. 2010 Dec;252(6):1027-36. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e3181e49683.
Some more ideas on how for instance multi-person 3D eye-tracking in a surgical theatre could be used to facilitate collaboration among the clinical staff.
Chetwood AS, Kwok KW, Sun LW, et al., 2012, Collaborative eye tracking: a potential training tool in laparoscopic surgery., Surg Endosc, Vol:26, 0930-2794, Pages:2003-2009
Kwok KW, Sun LW, Mylonas GP, et al., 2012, Collaborative gaze channelling for improved cooperation during robotic assisted surgery., Ann Biomed Eng, Vol:40, 0090-6964, Pages:2156-2167
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