Free toolsFace & eye tests
Face & eye tests

Focus stare timer

Time long low-blink screen staring during focused computer work. Works with your phone camera, laptop camera, or webcam. It runs entirely in your browser and the camera feed never leaves your device.

Ideal range
< 25
Your read
38 stare load
Takes
~60s
Save & track progress
Camera stays on devicenot medical advice
Phone camera option
Open this test on your phone

Prop your phone at desk height for front checks, or turn it sideways for side-view posture scans. Same test, same URL, no app.

Open phone link
QR ready
Facial-only tool

Time your focus stare pattern

This tool watches blink count, blinks per minute, eye closure, and long staring signals so you can decide when to take an eye break.

  • Blinks per minute
  • Blink count
  • Low-blink staring
  • Long blinks and reset signals

Camera stays on your device. This checks facial attributes only.

Signal dashboardLive scan ready

Your result appears here

Start the facial check to see eye strain and focus signals on this page.

Eye closure load0%

PERCLOS window

Live eye closure0%

Current eyelid signal

Jaw and head signal0%

Yawn or head-drop movement

0%
Eye closure load
PERCLOS window
0
Blinks/min
rolling estimate
0
Blink count
this check
0
Long blinks
600ms+ closures
0
Yawns
jaw-open signal
0
Head drops
baseline shifts
Face marker streamreadyOn-device analysisno uploadFrame updateson start

Low blink focus is treated as an eye-break prompt, not drowsiness, unless stronger fatigue signals also appear.

Camera privacy
Next steps

Your result stays visible. Use WorkPose when you want live coaching, history, or a second signal.

after result

What this test measures

This check reads your stare load from a short on-device camera scan and compares it against an evidence-based comfort range (< 25). The model maps the joints involved and averages the angle so a single fidget doesn't skew your result.

How to read your result

Green means you're inside the healthy range. Amber means you're drifting and it's worth a small adjustment. Coral means the angle is past the comfort line for long enough to cause strain. Your number updates live, so you can watch a fix land in real time.

What to fix first

  • Adjust the one input driving the biggest signal — screen height, chair depth or input distance.
  • Re-run the test and watch the meter move before you change anything else.
  • Set a reminder so the corrected posture becomes the default, not the exception.

When to use WorkPose Pro

One test reads one signal. If you want this checked continuously — combined with posture, eye strain and fatigue, with live nudges and a progress history — that's what Pro does. It turns a one-off number into a habit that holds.

How this facial check works

  • The analyzer counts blinks when the eyelid signal closes and reopens instead of guessing from one frame.
  • It estimates blinks per minute over the current visible window.
  • It pairs low-blink focus with stronger signals before escalating to possible fatigue.

How to use your result

  • Focus stare pattern: low blinks per minute during deep work means you should schedule a short eye break before strain builds.
  • Normal blink rhythm: keep working, but rerun the timer later in the focus block.
  • Long blinks or head drops: switch from eye break to a fuller reset.

Who this is for

Developers, gamers, writers, analysts, and anyone doing high-focus screen work can blink less without noticing. This tool makes that pattern visible.

How to use it

Run the timer during a focused work block. If blink rate drops and stays low, take a short eye break or use WorkPose sessions to nudge breaks automatically.

What it does not claim

This is not an eye exam and it does not diagnose dry eye. It is a browser-based screen-work awareness tool.

Related WorkPose tools

Sources

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