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Bionic Eye Abstract

The document summarizes a bionic eye being developed to restore vision. It uses an implanted chip behind the retina connected to an external camera via a transmitter. The chip stimulates remaining retinal neurons to produce images in the brain. Researchers have also developed a miniature internal camera to move with the eye. The bionic eye aims to treat blindness from retinal degeneration by electrically stimulating preserved inner retinal neurons, though high resolution requires stimulating thousands of pixels like in reading. It faces engineering challenges of interfacing with retinal cells over many years.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3K views

Bionic Eye Abstract

The document summarizes a bionic eye being developed to restore vision. It uses an implanted chip behind the retina connected to an external camera via a transmitter. The chip stimulates remaining retinal neurons to produce images in the brain. Researchers have also developed a miniature internal camera to move with the eye. The bionic eye aims to treat blindness from retinal degeneration by electrically stimulating preserved inner retinal neurons, though high resolution requires stimulating thousands of pixels like in reading. It faces engineering challenges of interfacing with retinal cells over many years.

Uploaded by

vamsi28
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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THE BIONIC EYE

DECRIRE- POSTER

P.L. HAARIKA,
A. GAURIKA,
DEPARTMENT OF BIO MEDICAL ENGINEERING,
GVP COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING FOR WOMEN,
E-MAIL ADDRESS : [email protected]
CONTACT NUMBER: 0891- 2796886

INTRODUCTION:
Researchers working for the Boston Retinal Implant Project have been developing a Bionic eye
implant that could restore the eye sight of people who suffer from age related blindness .The
implant is based on a small chip that is surgically implanted behind the retina, at the back of the
eye ball. An ultra-thin wire strengthens the damaged optic nerve; its purpose is to transmit light
and images to the brain’s vision system, where it is normally processed. Other than the implanted
chip and wire, most of the device sits outside the eye. The users would need to wear special eye
glasses battery-powered camera and a transmitter, which would send images to the chip
implanted behind the retina. The new device is expected to be quite durable, since the chip is
enclosed in a Titanium casing, making it both water-proof and corrosion-proof. The researches
estimate that the device will last for at least 10 years inside the eye.
The purpose of this report is to provide an accurate and detailed description of this bionic eye
(optoelectronic retinal prosthesis) and its function.

The new technology tested by Mrs. Moorfoot uses an external camera worn on a pair of dark
glasses that sends images to a radio receiver implanted near the eye that transmits the signal on to
a tiny silicon and platinum chip that sits on the retina. This information then goes down the optic
nerve into the brain. The team lead by Dr .Mark Humayun professor of ophthalmology and
Biomedical engineering at the Doheny eye institute in Los Angeles, California have now
developed a small and powerful camera that could be implanted inside the patient’s eye, rather than
worn on a pair of glasses. The camera is very, very small and very low power, so it can go inside
your eye and couple your eye movement to where the camera is.

Optoeloctronic Retinal Prosthesis:

Blindness is one of the most devastating consequences of disease. We develop electronic retinal
prosthesis for restoration of sight to patients suffering from degenerative retinal diseases such as
Retinitis Pigmentosa and Age-Related Macular Degeneration. In these conditions the
photoreceptor cells slowly degenerate, leading to blindness. However, many of the inner retinal
neurons that transmit signals from the photoreceptors to the brain are preserved to a large extent
for a prolonged period of time. -> Electrical stimulation of the remaining retinal neurons can
produce phosphenes - perception of light, and the first retinal implants involving a small number
of electrodes (16 to 60) yielded encouraging results in patients with retinal degeneration.
However, thousands of pixels are likely to be required for functional restoration of sight, such as
reading and face recognition.

Development of a high resolution retinal prosthesis faces multiple engineering and biological
challenges, such as delivery of information to thousands of pixels at video rate, placement of the
electrodes in close proximity to the target cells, avoidance of fibrotic encapsulation of the
implant, signal processing that compensates for the partial loss of the retinal neural network, and
many others.
This is how a bionic eye looks and its related information.

Thank you,

P.L. HAARIKA,
A. GAURIKA.

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