Search

Planet Earth

Monday, 23-December-2024
....

....

Login form

ad


Blind people can ‘see’ letters traced directly onto their - Forum

[ New messages · Forum rules · Search · RSS ]
  • Page 1 of 1
  • 1
Forum moderator: arya, dethalternate  
Blind people can ‘see’ letters traced directly onto their
ManuDate: Saturday, 06-June-2020, 9:31 PM | Message # 1
--dragon lord--
Group: undead
Messages: 13927
Status: Offline
Blind people can ‘see’ letters traced directly onto their brains

Findings point to a way to bypass damaged eyes and deliver ‘sights’ directly to the brain

By Laura Sanders

MAY 14, 2020 AT 11:00 AM

Scientists have developed a new way to create “sights” for blind people. It’s like skywriting, but instead of blue sky, the letters are written on the brain itself.

The new approach, described May 14 in Cell, bypasses the eyes and delivers a sequence of electrical signals to the brain, creating the perception of a glowing light that traces a shape. With further refinements, the method might one day restore aspects of vision to people with damaged eyes or optic nerves. Scientists have been able to create artificial visions by manipulating the brains of mice, but advances for people have been slower (SN: 7/18/19).

Tiny jolts of electricity to the visual cortex, a span of neural tissue at the back of the brain, can make a person “see” small bursts of light called phosphenes. Previous attempts to restore vision involved creating multiple phosphenes at the same time, like light bulbs on movie marquees. But those signals were hard to interpret, forming smatterings of lights or a blob of coalesced lights.

A clearer signal comes from using electricity as a stylus, essentially tracing lines onto the visual cortex with electric current. In tests with six volunteers who had grids of electrodes implanted in their brains, researchers activated the electrodes in a sequence that traced the lines of alphabet letters. The process is akin to someone writing the letter N on someone’s palm by making an upward line, then a downward swoop and then moving back up again.



This sequential writing method allowed recipients to quickly perceive intended shapes, Michael Beauchamp of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and his colleagues found.

Two participants were blind; four sighted participants had electrical grids implanted in their brains as part of treatment for epilepsy. One blind participant could recognize 86 shapes a minute with the technique.

So far, the researchers have tested only simple shapes, such as the letters C, W and U. But outlines of common objects, such as faces, houses or cars, could be traced using the same idea, the researchers write.

untotenawake
Read more/full article/source - https://www.sciencenews.org/article....letters
 
  • Page 1 of 1
  • 1
Search: