Microchip may help blind people see again
- Story Highlights
- A microchip may be able to help blind people see
- MIT wants to put the chip inside eyeballs; tests should begin in 3 years
- Patients would wear glasses that send video images to the inserted chip
- The chip would not restore full vision and there could be complications
updated 10:49 a.m. EDT, Thu September 24, 2009
By Priya Ganapati
MIT researchers are trying to use microchips to bring back sight for the blind.
It won't entirely restore normal vision, say the researchers, but it will offer just enough sight to help a blind person navigate a room.
"If they can recognize faces of people in a room, that brings them into the social environment as opposed to sitting there waiting for someone to talk to them," says Shawn Kelly, a a researcher in MIT's Research Laboratory for Electronics and a member of the project.
MIT's latest quest should be of interest to people like Rob Spence, a Canadian film maker who is on a quest to put a tiny wireless video camera into his empty right eye socket. Spence is looking to capture the world around him and a retinal implant like that from MIT could actually help bring him closer to his quest.
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A research team, led by MIT professor of electrical engineering John Wyatt, plans to start testing the prototype in blind patients within the next three years.
With feedback, researchers can configure the algorithm implemented by the chip to produce useful vision. Ultimately, the goal is to produce a chip that can be implanted for at least 10 years.
It's a risky and challenging procedure as researchers have to design an
implant that won't damage the eye. In the October issue of IEEE
Transactions on Biomedical Engineering journal, researchers have said
they hope to attach the implant to the outside of the eye, and put the
electrodes behind the retina.
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