ITotD: Bionic Eyes / Seeing is believing |
Bionic Eyes / Seeing is believing Posted: 09 Feb 2015 12:00 AM PST As a kid in the mid-’70s, one of my favorite TV shows was The Six Million Dollar Man. When astronaut and test pilot Steve Austin was critically injured in a plane crash, government scientists decided to replace his damaged body parts with electromechanical equivalents, making him the first bionic (or cybernetic) human. The cost for two new legs, a right arm, and a left eye turned out to be $6 million, but for that price Steve Austin was able not merely to walk again, but to outrun cars, lift enormous weights, and see faraway objects with a built-in zoom lens. The decisive statement, which we heard as a voiceover at the beginning of each week’s episode, was, “We can rebuild him. We have the technology.” Even though I knew the show was science fiction, I assumed we really did have the technology back then, or at least something close to it—and that the cost was the main reason people weren’t being fitted with bionic limbs on a regular basis. Of course, cost aside, we didn’t then, and still don’t, have the ability to come anywhere near that sort of body-part replacement. Medical science has made great advances in the development of prosthetic limbs, and perhaps someday, decades from now, amputees will be able to receive something like Steve Austin’s bionic arms and legs—though I wouldn’t count on superhuman strength and speed. But the eye…that’s another story. Even today, restoring sight to the blind seems like the province of myth and science fiction. In many ways, it’s a much harder problem to solve than creating an artificial arm or leg, but researchers are making significant progress, and the reality of a bionic eye may not be so far-fetched after all. Spare the Rod A more advanced approach places an array of microphotodiodes—think of them as miniature solar cells—directly onto a retinal implant. When light hits them, they generate electricity, which then directly stimulates the retinal nerves. This eliminates both the camera and the need for an external power source. Several clinical trials have already taken place, with very encouraging preliminary results. Meanwhile, NASA scientists are creating a similar implant using photosensitive ceramic films. Unlike silicon, ceramic does not degrade when exposed to the fluids inside the eye, and the ceramic implants are also porous—allowing nutrients to flow through them to the cells on the other side. The Matrix Revisited A much different approach to artificial sight, and one that requires no surgery at all, has been developed by Dr. Peter Meijer of Philips Research Laboratories in the Netherlands. It’s called the vOICe system—the three middle letters are capitalized to stand for “Oh, I see.” This system uses a small video camera mounted inside a pair of sunglasses or on a helmet, along with a computerized processing unit. It translates visual images into sounds, which are then fed through stereo headphones. As the user comes to associate certain kinds of sounds with corresponding shapes and motions, the effect is much like an artificial synesthesia, a phenomenon in which someone’s senses are crossed in such a way that stimulus of one sense causes perception in another—tasting shapes, seeing sounds, and so on. Over time, the brain comes to accept the auditory data as a substitute for visual data, although the subjective impression is still much less detailed than regular vision. None of the technologies currently in development provides even 20/20 eyesight, much less the high resolution, automatic zoom, and night vision of Steve Austin’s bionic eye. But when it comes to curing blindness, something is definitely better than nothing—and we’re heading in the right direction. Nowadays the most fantastic thing about the bionic man seems to be the price tag. Only $6 million? Now that’s science fiction. —Joe Kissell Permalink • Email this Article • Categories: Mind & Body, Science & Nature, Technology & Computing More Information about Bionic Eyes...This article was featured in The Synapse No. 3. For a brief overview of bionic eye technologies, read Bionic Eyes Benefit the Blind by Lakshmi Sandhana in Wired News. The article First look at “bionic eye” in News in Science discusses one of the retinal implants that uses an external camera and power source. Optobionics makes silicon-based retinal implants that produce their own power using microphotodiodes. Ceramic film implants are discussed in Bionic Eyes at NASA’s Web site. Vision Quest by Steven Kotler in Wired discusses brain implants for vision restoration. To learn more about vOICe, visit their home page. vOICe is also discussed in Sound gives ‘sight’ to blind by Fred Reed in The Washington Times. You can read all about The Six Million Dollar Man in the Wikipedia. Liz Phair’s song “Bionic Eyes” appeared on her eponymous Liz Phair album, which comes in both “clean” (Amazon.com) (iTunes Music Store) and “explicit” (Amazon.com) (iTunes Music Store) versions. Related Articles from Interesting Thing of the Day
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