Aussie Government Offers $40M To Build a Bionic Eye 89
An anonymous reader writes "The Australian Government is keen to replicate the success of the Cochlear Implant (bionic ear) by throwing AU$50M (US$40M) of funding at the development of a bionic eye. Bionic eyes have been trialed with some success in the UK — with recipients able to detect senses of shape and space, but very little detail."
Yesss (Score:1, Redundant)
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Re:$50M for an Eye...Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Supposedly there are 50,000 blind people in Australia.
http://www.bca.org.au/natpol/statistics/2005_Blind_Stats_num_and_perc_by_State_Territory_CERA.htm
$50,000,000 breaks down to $1000/blind person.
I'd guess that the cost in social services to help blind people probably exceeds $1000/yr per person (i.e. well over $50,000,000). Therefore it would make economic sense to cure blindness.
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Eyes are worth more (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Economical diesel cars already get close to that, so if car owners become really interested, it will be built without the need of a prize. If you go pure biodiesel you might even be able to meet the 200g/mile emissions requirement if it is a "net calculation".
2) A car that gets 100mpg from fossil fuels might end up a mere curiosity if we ever shift big time from fossil fuels to something else other than biofuels.
In contrast a working bionic eye is going to be useful for as long as humans (or other similar creatures) want eyes.
An efficient biofuel car is useful, but it by itself will not deal with the problem of starving out the poor - because as long as the rich are many times richer than the numerous poor, they can afford to pay a lot more to feed their cars so they wouldn't feel the pressure. It would likely need external regulation to make them care.
Here's some rough math:
Recommended energy per person: 2000 kcal = 8.36 megajoules
1 litre of vegetable oil = 34MJ - or about the daily energy allowance for 4 people.
1 litre of vegetable => approximately USD1.
How much would a rich (e.g. anyone who can afford a car) person be willing to pay per day to feed his car? USD2? If he can afford to pay more than 8 poor people, the 8 poor people are going to get less food assuming we don't keep converting forests to farmland.
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I just wish you could feed four people on one litre of vegetable oil.
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I just wish you could feed four people on one litre of vegetable oil.
Is it any better than one liter of high fructose corn syrup?
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10 square metres of oil palm produces 1 litre of vegetable oil per year.
So let's say 3650 square metres to produce 1 litre per day.
A similar size area (in suitable climate) should be able to produce 4 tons of bananas per year (assuming no petro-fertilizers etc). That's about 9800kcal per day (assuming 90kcal/100g bananas). Keep a few chickens around for protein, grow stuff under the banana trees, maybe have a small fish pond.
They might do OK till someone kicks the
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Although personally I like the idea of aquaponics, not as dense but simpler and I love the idea of feeding fish who feed bacteria who then feed fruits, her
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You can, but then they'll all have the shits.
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That is both fascinating and disturbing. Thanks for the link, though.
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Seriously though, if the eyes are good, it could become practical for people to add an "aux video in" (or two). That could dramatically change things more than high capacity batteries.
Why bother with energy guzzling LCDs for laptops if you can just strap on a small brick computer (iBrain?
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The reality is a high capacity, long life and low cost batteries will have a major change across the whole of society, from the obvious reduction in pollution of urban environment with all electric transport (the electricity could be generated hundreds of kilometres away from high population urban centres) an extreme improvement in human health, the making of intermittent alternate energy resources far more viable by storing between 20 to 48 hours of average energy needs at the point of use the home, 24 ho
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Wouldn't it be nice to see the sun set in a full spectrum, or have a monitor built into your eye,
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You can do that (theoretically) with contact lenses. I want zoom and recording.
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What good is a car to drive you to the strip club if you cannot SEE the strippers when you get there!
Just give me a week and I'll have it to you (Score:4, Funny)
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Idiot. She didn't have a Bionic eye. She had Bionic Hearing. It was Steve Austin that had the Bionic Eye.
Oh, and you're sick!
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Idiot. She didn't have a Bionic eye.
She actually ended up with upgraded night vision. And parent is wrong for not wanting a corpse, but wrong because Jaime Sommers is not dead. In fact, if he wants to mess with the bionic women (gen 1) he will have to deal with the six million dollar man [wikipedia.org] as they got married in the end.
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The failed do over for the show had a cutie too. Wasn't there some other bionic women (maybe gen 2-3?) that was a lot faster then Jamie? Some TV movie. I remember Jamie running and getting beat bad by the new girl.
OK I am old and liked the old and new show. Not so much the 6 million dollar man though.
And the new Starbuck (I forget her name (Katie Sackoff?)) was in the new Bionic woman show as well.
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Fortunately, I was already digging up Jaime Sommers' corpse for other uses.
Oh, and you're sick!
He's a forensics expert. What's so sick about.. oh, now I get what you thought he meant. Who would want to use a corpse for the carpool lane? You're sick!
Re:Jamie Sommers joke (Score:1)
Son: Mum, is Lindsay Wagner really bionic?
Mother: No, of course not. Why?
Son: Because Dad said he could screw the ass of her any-day...
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Why? She's not dead [wikipedia.org]...not the character, nor the person.
Remember? She didn't really die...she was frozen till they could cure her, and when she came back, she didn't remember loving Steve, and went off on her own adventures in her Bionic Woman show.
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The bionic woman (version 1) and bionic man [wikipedia.org] rekindled their romance and got married in the end. Sandra Bullock was going to take over, before she got famous.
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we don't need a "bionic eye" (Score:2)
we need a brain interface for said eye which we already have. We call it a CCD camera.
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I think that's the part that makes it "bionic" rather than synthetic.
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And for most people, a brain for said interface.
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The retina does more than just act like a CCD sensor - there are special neurons dedicated to basic tasks like motion detection, edge detection, contrast detection. While there are 100 million rods/cones in each eye, there are only around 1.2 million nerve fibres. Simulating this compression/conversion process in the past required a supercomputer and today requires a GPU card. To package a CCD sensor/GPU chip and VRAM into an eyeball sized package is going to be a big challenge.
Figuring out what a single la
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Wrong Approach? (Score:5, Interesting)
$40 million USD over 4 years is tiny! Wouldn't it be better to structure it as some sort of X-prize or some sort of incentive system predicated on success? I know it's hard to convince people to pop in a bionic eye so some stranger can tweak it but coming up with some parameters that could be objectively measured without sticking it into someone's body might be doable. X-prize type challenges can trigger research efforts in multiples of the actual prize itself.
X-prize or not, $40 million USD over 4 years is not going to go very far.
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Re:Wrong Approach? (Score:5, Funny)
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Stab peoples' eyes out at random!
You could also have people marry their mothers?
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The gods are pissed off and now someone must pay!
Oedipus Tex [wikipedia.org] could use a pair of these... you may have heard of his brother Rex.
Mal-2
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This is why we have patent systems. The government is really bad at valuing inventions.
That's so true it isn't even funny. The patent system exists because the government continually overvalues patentable processes, and simultaneously underestimates the cost of handing out sweeping exclusive privileges like candy.
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X-prizes type systems are nice, but they are mostly a PR stunt. This isn't to belittle them, or deny effectiveness, but you need real money to do research, not the prospect of maybe winning a prize. You can't hire researchers and buy equipment with prize money that you haven't won yet. So there still needs to be *real* grant money, *real* research contracts, or *real* investors to accomplish anything.
Furthermore, the prize money only defrays the cost of eventual success, it costs more money to win an X p
The real question is quality (Score:3, Interesting)
It's already possible to do really low quality artificial sight.
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+Seeing+Tongue-a078681631 [thefreelibrary.com]
As I see it, the main hurdle is just getting a eye hooked up with a decent amount of bandwidth (there are issues with power supply, nonrejection, et cetera, but those seem less difficult). The human brain is really good at creating interpreters for new inputs.
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Cops Are Theives
Fuck the police.
Already a song by NWA.
Lee Majors is spinning in his grave. (Score:1)
Re:Lee Majors is alive and healthier than you. (Score:1)
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Wounder how much (Score:2)
you would have left after taxes?
Probably not worth the effort.
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You probably won't, you probably will have to license it to the government run medical system at a fixed price.
Assuming you get to keep the rights at all. You might get a lump sum and lose the right to the invention because the development was paid for by the government in part or in whole.
As predicted by JoCo (Score:5, Funny)
Won't this fail for simple biological reasons? (Score:2)
Until we have t
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I think the "bionic eye" they refer to is more about the interface between an artificial eye and the human visual system, rather than an eye transplant. Like you said, the retina is composed of neural cells, so removing the eye or optic nerve leads to blindness that is most likely irreversible (like in retinal detachment). As far as I'm aware, "eye" transplants are transplants of the cornea.
Current artificial eyes pass signals to the retina or to the visual cortex, but they have very low resolutions. I've h
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Our current level of understanding and experience with neurobiology precludes brain transplants, which in turn precludes eye transplants.
This is backwards. You're saying that because we don't have the tools to replace the engine, we can't replace the spark plugs.
Car analogy to the rescue.
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Until we have that kind of knowledge, I don't see how any kind of eye replacement, whether via transplant or some kind of bionic prosthesis, will be possible. Of course, IANANB (I Am Not A Neurobiologist).
Umm... So are you saying because we don't have the knowledge we are going to fail because we don't have the knowledge?
I think the whole point of the research was to learn how to do it so they wouldn't fail at it.
The point of research us to learn about something we know nothing about.
World Domination (Score:2)
Crikey! (Score:2)
Enough Six Million Dollar Man! (Score:1)
I'd Upgrade... (Score:2)
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That way I'd still get DRM-free organic vision with one eye, would not have floaters (I'll pass on the floater EULA) and would be able to see my co-workers in their underwear with my left one.
Sir, I'm gonna need to ask for your geek card. No /.er should be working in any kind of business where that's a good thing.
Bionic eye sounds OK, but... (Score:1)
Inflation's a killer.... (Score:2)
According to the TV show it was suppose to be $6 Million for the entire man! No wonder it's taking so long.
40 Million? (Score:2)
Part of the "2020 summit" (Score:2)
This proposal has a bit of a backstory to it.
Last year, the newly-elected Australian government held something called the "2020 summit". The idea was to bring together 1000 of Australia's "best and brightest" - think academics, businesspeople, a smattering of celebrities including Hugh Jackman and Cate Blanchett (for the arts subtrack) to discuss ideas for Australia;s future. After two days of discussion, they came up with a list of suggestions.
Unfortunately, the government didn't like most of them. Some
Wrong again K Rudd (Score:1)