[blindza] Fw: Microchip success for bionic eye

  • From: "Jacob Kruger" <jacobk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "NAPSA Blind" <blind@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, "BlindZA" <blindza@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 4 Apr 2012 03:09:48 +0200

----- Original Message ----- Microchip success for bionic eye.


3 April 2012.

Research to restore sight to the clinically blind has reached a critical stage, with testing underway of the prototype microchips that will power the bionic eye.

Electrical engineers from the Monash Vision Group (MVG) have begun trailling the
microchips, with early laboratory tests proving positive, and pre-clinical
assessment due to begin shortly.

The Director of MVG, Professor Arthur Lowery said the positive result meant the project was on track to deliver a direct-to-brain bionic eye implant ready for
patient tests in 2014.

The bionic eye device will consist of a tiny camera mounted into a pair of
glasses, which acts as the retina; a pocket processor, which takes the
electronic information from the camera and converts it into signals enabling the
brain to build up a visual construct; and cortical implants of several tiles
which will be the portal for the stimulation of the visual cortex.

“The aim for this vision prosthetic is to be at least equivalent to a seeing-eye dog or a white cane. While it would initially complement existing aids such as these, we believe the device eventually will replace them, and as the technology is further refined, become sufficiently sensitive to discriminate large print,”
Professor Lowery said.

“The microchips we are testing will be implanted directly on the surface of a patient’s visual cortex, located at the back of the brain. It’s estimated that each patient will receive a grid of up to 14 eight-by-eight millimetre tiles,”
Professor Lowery said.

Each tile comprises a four-by-four millimetre microchip with some 500,000
transistors and 45 hair-thin electrodes. When fully operational, these tiles
will receive low-resolution, black-and-white images from an external digital
processing unit connected to a high-resolution camera.

Dr Jean-Michel Redouté, MVG’s Program Leader, Implantable Electronics, said one
of the project’s main challenges was harnessing and powering this array of
electrically-charged devices in the brain.

“Achieving acceptable vision requires far more electrode capacity than the
amount required to power a bionic ear. While the bionic ear requires
approximately 15 electrodes, we’ll need at least 600 to produce useful vision
for patients,” Dr Redouté said.

Over 50,000 people in Australia are considered clinically blind. The number
exceeds 160 million globally .

The MVG was established in April 2010, with an $8 million grant from the
Australian Research Council. The MVG accommodates more than 20 leaders in
physiology, neurosurgery, ophthalmology, electrical and electronic engineering,
mechanical and materials engineering, mathematics and immunology.

The MVG’s key partners are Monash University, Grey Innovation, Alfred Health and
MiniFab.

Source URL:
http://www.monash.edu.au/news/show/microchip-success-for-bionic-eye

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