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Florida Tech Researchers Doggedly Investigate What Canines See
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Florida Tech Researchers Doggedly

Investigate What Canines See

MELBOURNE, FLA.—What do dogs see that catches their attention? The researchers in the Cognition Applied Research Laboratory (CARL) at Florida Institute of Technology are working to find the answer. They usually conduct their eye-tracking research with humans, but they made an exception and invited a group of dogs and their owners to the lab. As a result, CARL is the first laboratory in the world to eye-track canines.
“Our dogs watch TV, scan the backyard for small and large intruders and look out windows to fixate on their departing or arriving owners,” said G. Susanne Bahr, director of CARL and Florida Tech associate professor of psychology. “Would it not be great to know exactly what they’re looking at?” So, she thought, “Let’s take the pooches to the lab and see if we can track their eye movements.” Bahr earned a doctoral degree in experimental psychology with a specialty in human cognition.

Her work is the first documented dog eye-tracking ever conducted.

Bahr, with researchers Edward Griffith, D.V.M., owner of Lake Jessup Animal Hospital in Winter Springs, Fla., and psychology undergraduate student Ashley Catlin, worked and played with four dogs to run a proof of concept study, which means they didn’t know what was going to happen. Open to the experiment were Yogi, an Akita; Harley, a St. Bernard puppy; Zack, an Australian Shepherd; and Berkley, a black Labrador.

The lab’s eye-tracking equipment is called FaceLab. FaceLab uses two cameras that captures separate views of the participant’s face and processes images of the eye area, namely, the iris and pupil. Much computation and calibration are involved as a person (or a dog) sits at the computer, looks at the monitor and the world around, while the eyes are being tracked.

The university head carpenter built a versatile experimental table to accommodate the equipment, the experimenter and the dog. Canines were controlled only by gentle posture corrections made by their owners. Dog treats were used to enhance participant compliance and redirect their attention; during the experimental session the dogs, not unlike human participants, tended to become bored and tired. The researchers successfully tracked canine head and eye movements for three of four dogs. What is the value of further research?

“It’s early days,” said Bahr. “Still, some applications are obvious, such as the qualification and annual requalification of seeing eye dogs, cataract diagnosis, and visual canine attention and aggressive behavior prediction. ” Bahr adds with a small smile, “Also, we think of research and development of television ads for canine viewers.” The team now ponders possible refinements to their approach.

For example, they might facilitate the research by restraining dog movement through a humanely designed crate. Or they may limit their sample to sedate, large breeds. These breeds may fatigue quickly but are highly compliant, calm and sized appropriately for the apparatus.

The team contemplates improvements. “In our future work we want to provide gaze accuracy validation and correction, and develop stimuli that uniquely appeals to canine participants,” said Bahr.

About Florida Institute of Technology
Founded at the dawn of the Space Race in 1958, Florida Tech is the only independent,
  technological university in the Southeast. With more than 9,000 students enrolled on main campus, extended campuses and online, Florida Tech has been named a Barron's  Guide “Best Buy” in College Education, designated a Tier One Best National University  in U.S. News & World Report, and is one of just nine schools in Florida lauded by the  2011 Fiske Guide to Colleges. The university offers undergraduate, graduate and  doctoral programs. Fields of study include science, engineering, aeronautics, business,  humanities, mathematics, psychology, communication and education. Additional  information is available online at www.fit.edu.

 
Karen Rhine
Assistant Director
University Communications
Florida Institute of Technology
(321) 674-8964
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