Bionic Eye Gives Blind Man Sight 203
AmigaMMC writes "A man who lost his sight 30 years ago says he can now see flashes of light after being fitted with a bionic eye. Ron, 73, had the experimental surgery seven months ago at London's Moorfield's eye hospital. He says he can now follow white lines on the road, and even sort socks using the bionic eye, known as Argus II. I wouldn't go as far as claiming he regained his sight, but this certainly is a biotechnological breakthrough."
Re:73 years old? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I wouldn't go as far as claiming he can see now (Score:3, Insightful)
They attached a microelectrode array to the retina of his eye, which stimulates based on a black and white visual input from a camera attached to some glasses.
Re:73 years old? (Score:5, Insightful)
Since it's an invasive procedure and quite experimental, they may also be considering that getting the 0.8alpha version could preclude getting the more perfected version later. So there's an advantage to a subject that would be too old to undergo an implant by the time the production version is ready. He gets some vision (which beats none) and nobody loses their chance for an even better outcome as a result of the experiment.
Re:The Eyeball Singularity (Score:4, Insightful)
Since they've gotten the eye-brain interface worked out, how long can it really take before artificial eyes are better than human ones? Technology increases exponentially, as a general rule.
Myself, I'm looking forward to open source eyes.
Way way way far off. Your eye has layers that compress the data that is received from the light input and sent down the optic nerve. To get better vision the implant would not stimulate the retina, since the max resolution would be the number of rods and cones in your eye to begin with, and being able to do that is not happening anytime soon. You would have to directly stimulate the optical cortex itself in order to get visual perceptions of higher quality than your eye can produce. That would require you to know how the body encodes the data in the eye, routes it to the visual cortex, and then you would need to implant stimulators at every single spot in the visual cortex in order to get visual perceptions that are better than the eye. You also have to encode, wirelessly transmit and wirelessly power the whole system. You would be better off genetically engineering a better eye and attempting to implant that instead.
I guess the short answer to your question is: not in your lifetime.
Re:The Eyeball Singularity (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:73? Couldn't they find a younger candidate? (Score:3, Insightful)
You might want to read the article and find out how much vision has been restored.
You also might want to realize that at this stage ANY chance to do this experiment on anybody benefits the knowledge for all future research in this are, thus helping everyone.
Another misleading Slashdot headline (Score:1, Insightful)
I wouldn't go as far as claiming he regained his sight...
But, Slashdot editors would.
Re:Like a cochlear implant (Score:3, Insightful)
22 electrodes in a cochlear implant would correspond roughly to a 22-bar spectrum analyzer. If each electrode gives a weaker or stronger signal in relation to audio intensity and only responds to a certain frequency range due to it's location in the cochlea then that is going have a bigger payoff than the same number of electrodes on an artifical retina where each electrode corresponds roughly to a grayscale pixel and said pixels aren't necessarily arranged in a neat grid.
It doesn't surprise me that 22 electrodes suffices for a workable sense of hearing but only provides a very rudimentary sight.
Re:I'm not buying it (Score:2, Insightful)
He was blind, not crippled. You can't stop a guy masturbating, short of disabling his penis' functionality.
Re:73 years old? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Eyeball Singularity (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as color sensitivity, I wasn't referring to adding more colors, but shifting the points where our color sensitivity lies. For instance moving the sensitivity of "red" cones to a longer wavelength would allow the viewer to see infrared. It is even conceivable that we would be able to switch which frequencies trigger the given neurons, allowing us to scan across the IR spectrum (within the capabilities of the detector) or have normal human vision. Whether a person would want to do this or society would be willing to find the resources to actually make these is a different question completely...
Re:When i see things like this... (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, what he perceives will be nothing like an 8x8 bitmap image. His brain will do all sorts of cool vision interpretation, including accumulating visual scene information over time (by way of small motions of the head, for example). With all this, I imagine that what he sees will be WAY higher fidelity than an 8x8 bitmap.
Re:When i see things like this... (Score:2, Insightful)
My wife is an optometrist. She wants every patient to get dilated. Her explanation is that it makes the difference between looking into a room through the keyhole or looking through the open door. Still people don't like the drops, they don't like how it feels, they don't like having blurry vision until it wears off, many people refuse to get dilated.
I wish more people understood that you can go blind without realizing it.
So, thanks for sharing. Maybe some nerds will listen & get their eyes checked.
Re:73? Couldn't they find a younger candidate? (Score:3, Insightful)
How much did this experiment cost? I don't wish to sound callous, but we waste too many health care dollars on people who have already lived a full life.
I'll be 57 next year, you insensitive clod, and yes, I've lived a full life and have fewer years ahead than behind. I've contributed to YOUR welfare all that time, kid.
I had cataract surgery [slashdot.org] in 2006 and a Vitrectomy [slashdot.org] last April. You're saying that I should have just gone blind in my left eye?
What an asshat. My "foes" list is empty but sometimes I'm sorely tempted, this is one of those times.
Re:Too bad he's in London (Score:4, Insightful)
You ain't kidding. I went to high school in california and got my first driver's license there. During the driving test, you start with 100 points, then they deduct points for each mistake. If you get below 70, you fail. I ran a red light during my driving test and didn't use my turn signal during a u-turn. I passed with an 83. A friend of mine (a girl) passed with a 72. She backed over a mailbox during a three point turn.