Scientists have managed to restore a degree of sight to six blind people, and
now plan a larger scale trial of the technology.
The system uses a camera mounted on a pair of glasses that takes 16-pixel
images and relays them to a processor held on the belt. This signal is sent to
an electronic implant in the head which displays the image on the retina.
"It is amazing how much our subjects have been able to do even with 16
pixels," Professor Mark Humayun, of the
Doheny
Eye Institute at the
University
of Southern California, told The Guardian.
"We thought from simulations that 16 pixels would only give distinction
between light and dark and maybe some grey scale. We were completely wrong."
The system is already being upgraded to cover 60 pixels and the implant has
been shrunk so that it can be embedded in the eyelid. This would cut the
operation to install the unit from eight hours to 90 minutes and cut the cost to
around £15,000.
At the moment the 16-pixel image is very limited, but with more advanced
technology it is thought that a reasonable working eye could be produced.
This would take around 10,000 pixels, but this was the estimate before it was
shown how well the brain could process such information.
Professor Humayun said that the implant would not be suitable for everyone,
but would work best with those who had been sighted before going blind. The
optical nerve also needs to be completely intact.
Singer Stevie Wonder has reportedly been interested in the technology, but as
someone who lost his sight as a young child he was not a suitable candidate for
the first set of trials.
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