I Can See Clearly Now
Bionic eyes seem the stuff of
science fiction.. bot not only are they real, they keep improving: A new technique
has the potential to help patients with retinal implants see better, indoors
and out.
People who have lost their vision
due to a degenerative eye condition can have it partially restored with this
technology. retinal implants, chips of electrodes inserted in the retina, work
by electrically stimulating a patient's remaining retinal cells directly,
rather than letting light waves do it.
An external camera mounted within
glasses capture an image and feeds it to a simple microprocessor- typically
worn somewhere on the body, like a belt - which then wirelessly transmits a set
of instructions to the electrodes in an implant. those electrodes then
re-create the image in grainy black and white within the eye's retinal cells,
presto, electronic eyesight. relying on them indoors, where one can make out
vague shapes with stark contrast, is one thing. step outside, though, and it
throws implants into a frenzy.
The uniformly bright background
stimulates most of the electrodes on the retinal implant, says physicist
Wolfgang fink of the university of Arizona. each electric produces a
hemispherical electric field that clashes with its neighboring electrode's
signal, since electric fields cannot cross, "it's a rule most implant
efforts seem to ignore" says fink.
Fink and physicist Erich Schmid, of
the university of Tubingen in Germany, say the answer lies in the way the electrodes
are stimulated. They developed a computational modal that organizes the
electric fields- the difference between a geyser and the fountains of Bellagio
- to work with this oft-overlooked rule.
Their model programs a kind of
choreography for the electrodes in an implant, a process they call shaping the
electric field, groups of neighboring, but not adjacent, electrodes would
quickly fire in succession to prevent warring electric fields. Doing this would
result in better resolution, perhaps even enough to recognize faces.
Fink's technique doesn't require new
hardware, so patients wouldn't face new surgeries "It's like downloading a
new driver for a printer," says fink. "You still have the same
printer, but all of a sudden, you have new capabilities." patients would
simply download an update onto the external device already connected to their
implants, giving their microprocessors new instructions on how to stimulate the
electrodes.
It might be a while before today's
patients see the benefits, but good sci-fi technology is always worth the wait.
"sometimes you have to swim upstream to get a new breakthrough," fink
says.
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