More broadly, as tools advance and catch signals to notify of certain irregularities, this may be of interest:
"Jan Egger and Jens Kleesiek, medical researchers at Essen University Hospital in Germany, are looking at ways in which the headset might be useful for health care2. They say that the Vision Pro’s advanced eye-tracking technology might be capable of picking up conditions such as vertigo, or even early signs of a stroke or dementia. The pair plan to study this when they get one of the headsets. “You have different eye movements and these can be detected using such a device,” says Kleesiek. “The quality of the sensor readings is so high that you can actually utilize it for such medical tasks.""
I have worked with multiple people over the years that use rapid eye movement as a false sign of intelligence... let me explain:
A CIO I worked with would rapidly move her eyes banck and forth as an indication she was "scanning and super smart analyzing all things..."
Total fraud. wound up only hiring BSAs on her court and tantilizing CEOs into paying her and her friends 200K++
(BTW GoPro fell victim) (regardless that they are successful as a company, this person was successful in frauding through things they dont know)
--
Another person I knew built a very successful company, but in any interactions had rapid eye movements attepting to "demonstrate" how focused they were and pulling the Beautiful Mind Meme/rain-man BS.... only later to learn, rfaud.
Focus on the people who have their eyes closed.
"You can always close your eyes, but never your ears"
"Jan Egger and Jens Kleesiek, medical researchers at Essen University Hospital in Germany, are looking at ways in which the headset might be useful for health care2. They say that the Vision Pro’s advanced eye-tracking technology might be capable of picking up conditions such as vertigo, or even early signs of a stroke or dementia. The pair plan to study this when they get one of the headsets. “You have different eye movements and these can be detected using such a device,” says Kleesiek. “The quality of the sensor readings is so high that you can actually utilize it for such medical tasks.""
"2. Egger, J. et al. Preprint at arXiv https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2308.04313 (2023)."