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Peering into the back of someone’s eye and seeing an array of electrodes like the ones here. These aren’t pictures from a Hollywood cyborg movie, but real photos of the eyeballs of blind people who have had retinal implants – microchips designed to stimulate the nerves at the back of the eye in response to light. Known as Argus II, these chips have been put into patients who have lost their sight due to a disease called retinitis pigmentosa. Although the implants don’t fully restore sight and take a lot of practice to use, they enable patients to distinguish the difference between dark and light. This improves over time, showing that the parts of the brain that receive visual information can be retrained and rewired even in adults. There’s a long way to go before these chips can truly enable the blind to see, but the picture is becoming clearer. Written by Kat Arney Image from work by E. Castaldi and colleagues University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy Images originally published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) Published in PLOS Biology, October 2016 You can also follow BPoD on Twitter and Facebook
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via Tumblr http://ift.tt/2iAoj85 Peering into the back of someone’s eye and seeing an array of electrodes like the ones here. These aren’t...
bpod-mrc: Artificial Eye Imagine
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