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Blind See With Prosthetic Retina

We're strolling into Star Trek territory here, folks, and there's no turning back. Researchers at the University of Southern California and the Doheny Retina Institute have created a prosthetic retina that can allow the blind to detect light/motion and identify objects. We've seen a few of these things before using photosensors hooked up to a few distinct nerves which allowed for a very strange form of synesthesia that gives some light sensitivity but these things sound a bit more powerful.

They're not going to be driving any time soon (although I recall reading of an earlier, similar project where the patient did drive around), but to be able to "figure out the spatial orientation of a bar or the capital letter L-with 61 to 80 percent accuracy" is amazing.

Six previously blind patients detect light, motion, identify objects with retinal prostheses [EurekaAlert]

2:34 PM on Mon May 2 2005
By johnb
72 views