| 1 |   | Software | 
          
          
            |   | 1 | **PyGaze - Open-source toolbox for eye tracking in Python** | 
          
          
            |   | 2 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 3 | ''Description'' | 
          
          
            |   | 4 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 5 |   PyGaze is an open-source toolbox for eye tracking in Python. It has an uniform and user-friendy syntax and it is aimed for people with minor to advanced programming skills in Python. Pygaze acts as a wrapper around several existing packages, among  | 
          
          
            |   | 6 |   which PyGame, PsychoPy, pylink (for SR Research EyeLink systems), SensoMotoric Instruments’ iViewX API, and the Tobii SDK. From stimulus presentation to eye-tracker communication: everything can be handled by via PyGaze scripting. As a a Python  | 
          
          
            |   | 7 |   library for eye tracking you can use a set of plugins that will allow you to use PyGaze from within OpenSesame. You can install PyGaze on Windows as well as on Ubuntu.  | 
          
          
            |   | 8 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 9 |   PyGaze supports the following eye trackers: | 
          
          
            |   | 10 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 11 |   - EyeLink — For information on how to run OpenSesame with PyLink support | 
          
          
            |   | 12 |   - EyeTribe — Works out of the box. | 
          
          
            |   | 13 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 14 |   Advantages of PyGaze: | 
          
          
            |   | 15 |    | 
          
          
            |   | 16 |   - user-friendly platform | 
          
          
            |   | 17 |   - saccade detection algorithm (for online detection) | 
          
          
            |   | 18 |   - sharing code is easy (works on Windows, Linux and Mac OSX) | 
          
          
            |   | 19 |   - creating eyetracking experiments in Python syntax with the least possible effort | 
          
          
            |   | 20 |   - can be used for visual and auditory stimulus presentation; for response collection via keyboard, mouse, joystick, and other external hardware | 
          
          
            |   | 21 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 22 |   **URL:** | 
          
          
            |   | 23 |  | 
          
          
            |   | 24 |   1. http://www.pygaze.org/ | 
          
          
            |   | 25 |   2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24258321 | 
          
          
            |   | 26 |   3. http://osdoc.cogsci.nl/3.1/manual/eyetracking/pygaze/ |