Brelén, Marten
[UCL]
Duret, F
Gérard, Benoît
[UCL]
Delbeke, Jean
[UCL]
Veraart, Claude
[UCL]
A blind volunteer, suffering from retinitis pigmentosa, has been chronically implanted with an optic nerve visual prosthesis. Vision rehabilitation with this volunteer has concentrated on the development of a stimulation strategy according to which video camera images are converted into stimulation pulses. The aim is to convey as much information as possible about the visual scene within the limits of the device's capabilities. Pattern recognition tasks were used to assess the effectiveness of the stimulation strategy. The results demonstrate how even a relatively basic algorithm can efficiently convey useful information regarding the visual scene. By increasing the number of phosphenes used in the algorithm, better performance is observed but a longer training period is required. After a learning period, the volunteer achieved a pattern recognition score of 85% at 54 s on average per pattern. After nine evaluation sessions, when using a stimulation strategy exploiting all available phosphenes, no saturation effect has yet been observed.
Bibliographic reference |
Brelén, Marten ; Duret, F ; Gérard, Benoît ; Delbeke, Jean ; Veraart, Claude. Creating a meaningful visual perception in blind volunteers by optic nerve stimulation.. In: Journal of neural engineering, Vol. 2, no. 1, p. S22-8 (2005) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/10175 |