05th April 2005 07:33 PM
Baltimore, Maryland: Professor Gislin Dagnelie of John Hopkins University created a bionic eye that connects the brain to a small camera, with the hope of allowing blind people to see again.
The device works by implanting a chip into the retina that translates signals transmitted from a CCD camera in a pair of glasses into impulses the brain can interpret. The images are fairly basic, but could be clear enough to allow a blind person to recognise familiar visual cues such as shapes and faces.
Designed to bypass diseased cells found in the retina of patients with macular degeneration, a common cause of blindness, the implant uses 50-100 electrodes to stimulate viable cells in the retina directly.
Professor Dagnelie said, "We are hoping this will be enough for the person to be able to make their way through a building, find a door or window and avoid obstacles for example.
"To us, the images look very basic but for someone who was previously blind they are a massive step forward."