Abstract:Head-mounted devices integrated with eye tracking promise a solution for natural human-computer interaction. However, they typically require per-user calibration for optimal performance due to inter-person variability. A differential personalization approach using Siamese architectures learns relative gaze displacements and reconstructs absolute gaze from a small set of calibration frames. In this paper, we benchmark Siamese personalization on polarization-enabled eye tracking. For benchmarking, we use a 338-subject dataset captured with a polarization-sensitive camera and 850 nm illumination. We achieve performance comparable to linear calibration with 10-fold fewer samples. Using polarization inputs for Siamese personalization reduces gaze error by up to 12% compared to near-infrared (NIR)-based inputs. Combining Siamese personalization with linear calibration yields further improvements of up to 13% over a linearly calibrated baseline. These results establish Siamese personalization as a practical approach enabling accurate eye tracking.
Abstract:Polarization-resolved near-infrared imaging adds a useful optical contrast mechanism to eye tracking by measuring the polarization state of light reflected by ocular tissues in addition to its intensity. In this paper we demonstrate how this contrast can be used to enable eye tracking. Specifically, we demonstrate that a polarization-enabled eye tracking (PET) system composed of a polarization--filter--array camera paired with a linearly polarized near-infrared illuminator can reveal trackable features across the sclera and gaze-informative patterns on the cornea, largely absent in intensity-only images. Across a cohort of 346 participants, convolutional neural network based machine learning models trained on data from PET reduced the median 95th-percentile absolute gaze error by 10--16\% relative to capacity-matched intensity baselines under nominal conditions and in the presence of eyelid occlusions, eye-relief changes, and pupil-size variation. These results link light--tissue polarization effects to practical gains in human--computer interaction and position PET as a simple, robust sensing modality for future wearable devices.