DIEM
DIEM
We use state of the art eyetracking and data analysis methods to collect, visualize, and quantify our data.
The DIEM Project, Dynamic Images and Eye Movements, focuses on what we attend to in moving images like video, film, and the world itself.
We have collected data from over 250 people watching 85 videos of all sorts, including movies, television shows, music videos, and commercials.
The DIEM Project has also developed new visualization and analysis tools. CARPE, Computational and Algorithmic Representation and Processing of Eye-movements, lets users visualize where people look and attend in videos and film.
The DIEM project data and viewer are freely available for research and non-commercial use as restricted by a CC-NC-SA 3.0 Creative Commons license.
The DIEM Project was initially made possible by generous funding from the Leverhulme Trust and the Economic and Social Research Council of the UK to John M. Henderson.
More information about DIEM can be found at: