1 / 18

VISUAL PROSTHESIS

VISUAL PROSTHESIS. By Richard Jones and David Henley. OVERVIEW. Various methods of helping (partially) blind Brain implant Seeing with sound Eye implant. The First Useful Artificial Eye . First implanted in 1978 Allowed ‘ Jerry ’ to see shades of grey

muniya
Download Presentation

VISUAL PROSTHESIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VISUAL PROSTHESIS By Richard Jones and David Henley

  2. OVERVIEW • Various methods of helping (partially) blind • Brain implant • Seeing with sound • Eye implant

  3. The First Useful Artificial Eye • First implanted in 1978 • Allowed ‘Jerry’ to see shades of grey • Whilst connected to a 10ft by 7ft, 2 ton computer • Now computer weighs 5kg, and Jerry sees phosphenes • Edge detection algorithms applied to images from camera • ‘Jerry’ can navigate New York subway • Very limited field of view

  4. Neural Implants • Camera mounted on glasses • Computer converts signals into a form that can be ‘understood’ by the brain • Signal passes down wires into the skull • Connect to an electrode array on the surface of the visual cortex. • Since the 1950s it has been known that stimulating the visual cortex produces phosphenes

  5. The Second Generation • Costs $80,000 US • Percutaneous pedestals - were sunk into both sides of Jens skull • Connected to platinum electronic arrays lying on surface of visual cortex • Phosphene images had to be mapped • He drove a car

  6. Alternative methods • Implant described sits on top of the visual cortex • Many neurons are stimulated at once • Richard Normann, is working on device that will be implant into the visual cortex • Lower voltages required, so safer • Much more accurate • Potential to stimulate individual neurons

  7. vOICe DEVICE • Visual Cortex can be stimulated by sound • Typically 4000 pixels (vocals) / sec • Perception 1000-4000 • $2500 (exc training/adaptation) • Environment /web etc

  8. HOW IT WORKS • 1) Left and Right • Scanning, stereo • 2) Top and Bottom • Pitch = elevation • 3) Dark and Light • Loudness = brightness

  9. EXAMPLE Oscilloscope other sound?

  10. EXAMPLE 2

  11. USER THOUGHTS • A late-blinded user of The vOICe commented on August 29, 2002, saying: ``Just sound?.... No, It is by far more, it is sight ! There IS true light perception generated by the vOICe. When I am not wearing the voice the light I perceive from a small slit in my left eye is a grey fog. When wearing the vOICe the image is light with all the little greys and blacks. Yet a definite light image .”…….

  12. ADVANTAGES • Cheap (1/10 implant cost) • Fewer risks • Quick • No implants, no electrodes, no surgery • Unobtrusive

  13. DISADVANTAGES • Cannot hear anything else • Limited information • Brain can only perceive so much sound • Training is equivalent to learning a foreign language

  14. EYE IMPLANT • Artificial Retina • Optic nerves and ganglia are intact • Partially sighted • Infra-red positioning/info/power

  15. EYE IMPLANT

  16. EYE IMPLANT

  17. EXAMPLE OF PIXELATION

  18. CONCLUSON • Field is advancing all the time • Three routes mentioned here have adv/disadv • Dr. Dobelle has predicted that guide dogs / Braille will be obsolete by 2100 • Geordi LaForge here we come!!!

More Related