Updated
Updated · vnews.com · Jul 16
Dartmouth Study Finds Eye Scans Form Biometric Fingerprints Across Hundreds of New Spaces
Updated
Updated · vnews.com · Jul 16

Dartmouth Study Finds Eye Scans Form Biometric Fingerprints Across Hundreds of New Spaces

1 articles · Updated · vnews.com · Jul 16

Summary

  • Researchers at Dartmouth found people’s first eye movements in unfamiliar environments are stable enough to act like an “attentional fingerprint,” potentially identifying individuals from gaze patterns alone.
  • Hundreds of virtual-reality scenes and eye-tracking headsets let the team measure which objects participants noticed first, showing those split-second scans reflect internal priorities, memories and interests.
  • The study suggests people do not merely interpret shared scenes differently later; personality and mindset shape what they initially encode in the first milliseconds of looking around.
  • Robertson said that makes gaze data sensitive behavioral and biometric information, especially as eye tracking spreads into VR headsets, AR glasses, cars and other consumer devices.
  • Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the findings raise privacy concerns that eye-tracking systems could infer traits such as politics or interests while recognizing specific users.

Insights

Could your unique eye-gaze pattern become the next key for unlocking your phone or diagnosing hidden health conditions?
How will we protect our 'attentional fingerprints' when our glasses can read our subconscious thoughts?