Glow in the dark. Using a heat-sensitive camera for blind individuals with prosthetic vision
Authors
Roksana Sadeghi, Arathy Kartha, Michael P Barry, Chris Bradley, Paul Gibson, Avi Caspi, Arup Roy, Gislin Dagnelie
Publication Date
7/1/2021
Description
To date, retinal implants are the only available treatment for blind individuals with retinal degenerations such as retinitis pigmentosa. Argus II is the only visual implant with FDA approval, with more than 300 users worldwide. Argus II stimulation is based on a grayscale image coming from a head-mounted visible-light camera. Normally, the 11°× 19° field of view of the Argus II user is full of objects that may elicit similar phosphenes. The prosthesis cannot meaningfully convey so much visual information, and the percept is reduced to an ambiguous impression of light. This study is aimed at investigating the efficacy of simplifying the video input in real-time using a heat-sensitive camera. Data were acquired from four Argus II users in 5 stationary tasks with either hot objects or human targets as stimuli. All tasks were of m-alternative forced choice design where precisely one of the m≥ 2 response alternatives was defined …
Journal
Vision Research
Volume
184
Issue
Pages
23-29
Publisher
Pergamon