Microchip in the Eye Seeks to Restore Vision

retinal-implant3A chip inside the eye that can help blind people see again is moving closer to reality as researchers at MIT work on a retinal implant that can bypass damaged cells and directly offer visual input to the brain.


Patients who receive the implant will wear a pair of glasses that has a tiny camera attached to it. The camera will send images to a microchip implanted in the eyeball that channels the input to the brain.

It won’t entirely restore normal vision, say the researchers, but it will offer just enough sight to help a blind person navigate a room.

“If they can recognize faces of people in a room, that brings them into the social environment as opposed to sitting there waiting for someone to talk to them,” says Shawn Kelly, a a researcher in MIT’s Research Laboratory for Electronics and a member of the project.

MIT’s latest quest should be of interest to people like Rob Spence, a Canadian filmmaker who is on a quest to put a tiny wireless video camera into his empty right eye socket. Spence is looking to capture the world around him and a retinal implant like that from MIT could actually help bring him closer to his quest.

Here’s how the implant works. The glasses that patients wear contains a coil that wirelessly transmits power to receiving coils surrounding the eyeball. The eyeball holds a microchip encased in a sealed titanium case to avoid damage from water seepage. The chip receives visual information and activates electrodes that in turn fire the nerve cells that carry visual input to the brain.
retinal-implant2

A research team, led by MIT professor of electrical engineering John Wyatt, plans to start testing the prototype in blind patients within the next three years.

With feedback, researchers can configure the algorithm implemented by the chip to produce useful vision. Ultimately, the goal is to produce a chip that can be implanted for at least 10 years.

It’s a risky and challenging procedure as researchers have to design an implant that won’t damage the eye. In the October issue of the IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering journal, researchers have said they hope to attach the implant to the outside of the eye, and put the electrodes behind the retina.

EDITOR’S NOTE 9/24/2009: As several commenters have pointed out, similar research predates the MIT prototype described here. For example, UC Santa Cruz electrical engineering professor Wentai Liu first installed a retinal implant in 2002. Also in 2002, Wired reported on a brain implant designed by William Dobelle that promised to restore sight. All of these projects, as well as MIT’s, are freaking amazing.

Photos: Models of the retinal implant/MIT


Ripxx debuts Personal Measurement Device for exercise nerds and Olympic athletes

If we’re being candid, the Ripxx Personal Measurement Device (or PMD, as the hip kids call it) looks a lot like the original SPOT with the addition of a display. But aside from the physical likeness, there aren’t too many similarities between the two gizmos. Launched this month, the handheld fitness tool is apt to be a surefire winner for any competitive athlete, not to mention competitive individuals in general who just need a statistical way to track their dominance. Essentially, an integrated GPS tracker pumps out ten tracking signals every second during, let’s say, a ski run. That information, coupled with data gathered from a trio of accelerometers and gyroscopes, is used to record your location, orientation, speed, vertical drop, rolls, spins, turns and just about any other movement you make. Once you’re done, those points can be plotted on a map for review. We’re told that the U.S. Olympic team is already using a prototype to train for the 2010 winter games, though mere lay people won’t be able to buy one until mid-December for $329.

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Ripxx debuts Personal Measurement Device for exercise nerds and Olympic athletes originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 18:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Phone pictures Microsoft doesn’t want seen yet

Microsoft's Turtle looks like a chunky child's version of a Palm Pre, according to Gizmodo.

(Credit: Gizmodo)

“Project Pink” is Microsoft’s new phone for regular people. Rumors about the software go back months, but the hardware, and who’s making it for Microsoft, has been

Best Buy bringing value priced all-in-one 32-inch LCD & Blu-ray HDTV to stores “soon”

It’s not that surprising to learn Best Buy will be among those delivering a 1080p LCD with Blu-ray disc player packed in under its Insignia store brand, as we’ve been expecting rebadged units from overseas to hit the value market for some time. Marked “coming soon” at $599, it’s easily a few hundred less than a comparable model from Sharp, but buyers will have to live without some of the newer line items like 120Hz motion processing and a contrast ratio higher than 20,000:1. Though we don’t expect a lot in terms of load times, audio support or other features (no specs on the Blu-ray player noted) we’re sure a bedroom or dorm room somewhere will find a spot for the NS-LBD32X. Your move, Wal-mart.

[Thanks, Zach]

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Best Buy bringing value priced all-in-one 32-inch LCD & Blu-ray HDTV to stores “soon” originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 18:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dialed In 97: What’s a femtocell?

You may have heard the term “femtocell” being tossed around lately, but what exactly is it? In this week on Dialed In, we discuss how femtocell products can help to improve your cell phone signal and list some of the devices available on the market today. We also check out …

Originally posted at Dialed In Podcast

The Pink Phone Pictures Microsoft Doesn’t Want You To See Yet

Project Pink is Microsoft’s secret new phone, their first major phone play since the iPhone. Here are the first pictures of Pink phones, Turtle and Pure.

These phones are going to be made by Sharp, who’ll get to share branding with Microsoft. Sharp produced the Sidekick hardware for Danger, who was bought by Microsoft almost two years ago. Pink will be primarily aimed at the same market as the Sidekick, and the branding and identity for it is highly developed, pointing toward a later stage in the development cycle.

The prior relationship between Danger and Sharp is the only reason we can think of why Microsoft stuck with Sharp for the new phones, and perhaps why they look so much like remixed Sidekicks. (Kind of yucky, that is.) The youth bent is somewhat surprising, if Pink is going to be their big consumer phone play, building off the expertise of Danger and members of the Zune team.

The hardware design has a definite younger feeling: Turtle looks like a chunky child’s version of a Palm Pre, while Pure seems like a standard slider, and both are clearly plastic, with an overall sense of roundedness, thanks to lots of soft angles and circular keys.

It’s been reported elsewhere that Pink phones will include Zune services, and have its own app store, making it as close to the Zune phone as we may get. We’ll see if it’s close enough in the coming months, though these are the only facts our source will let us safely publish for now.

Maingear, CyberPower and iBuyPower gaming desktops pick up ATI Radeon HD 5870

ATI’s Radeon HD 5870 GPU has already taken its rightful place within a few of Alienware’s newest desktops, but as with most every major GPU launch, a few of the smaller guys are also taking the opportunity to offer gamers the option to pick one up inside of a new rig. Maingear‘s Ephex, F131, Prelude, and Dash can all be ordered up right now with the staggeringly potent graphics card, and if none of those suit your fancy, CyberPower would be more than happy to have your business. In fact, it has squeezed the DirectX 11-friendly GPU into the Gamer Xtreme 4200 (starts at $999), Gamer Xtreme 5200 (starts at $1,393) and the AMD-based Gamer Dragon 9500 (starting at $927). Still on the hunt? iBuyPower has an eerily similar trio, though their lineup starts at just $819. Hit the read links below if you feel like putting together a system for kicks, but don’t blame us when the order button presses itself.

Read – Maingear rigs
Read – CyberPower rigs
Read – iBuyPower rigs

Continue reading Maingear, CyberPower and iBuyPower gaming desktops pick up ATI Radeon HD 5870

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Maingear, CyberPower and iBuyPower gaming desktops pick up ATI Radeon HD 5870 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 17:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Coupe love

Nissan GT-R

The Nissan GT-R proves that the coupe is the best body style in the world.

(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET)


I love coupes. I would go so far as to say that the coupe is the best style of car in the world. Limiting a full-size car to two doors may …

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

Case-Mate I.D. adds extra pouch to iPhone

I got the Jesus phone and a Platinum Plus card. Isn’t that enough street cred for you?

(Credit: Dong Ngo/CNET)

I’m not a fan of protective case for gadgets (which, as long as they function, are fine the way they are, even with a few scratches). For …

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

Jabra Stone to bring ‘new shape’ to Bluetooth headset field

C’mon, cut us some slack here. We’re suckers for teasers, and our intuition says that you are too. Jabra, who has definitely done a thing or two for the Bluetooth headset realm, is apparently looking to reveal a “new shape” on October 20th, though it’ll only be sold through AT&T (at least initially). Heck, there’s even a countdown timer over on the outfit’s teaser page for those who’d like to watch every second from now till then tick away, not to mention a brief video that tersely details the forthcoming excellence. So, got any bright ideas about what this thing could be? The second coming of the BT headset? Just another tchotchke?

[Via Electricpig]

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Jabra Stone to bring ‘new shape’ to Bluetooth headset field originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 16:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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