About UPI  |  UPI en Español   |   My Account
Free News Update:
United Press International - News. Analysis. Insight.™ - 100 Years of Journalistic Excellence
  • Home
  • Top News
  • Entertainment
  • Odd News
  • Sports
    • Baseball
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Olympics 2008
    • Tennis
  • Business
  • Science
  • Health
  • Analysis
    • Energy Resources
    • Security Industry
    • Emerging Threats
  • Media
    • Video
    • News Photos
  • Features
    • The Voice of Young Voters
    • Path to the Presidency
    • Energy
    • Beijing Olympics 2008
Search:
Go
You are here:  Home / Science News / Uzbek inventor creates eyesight substitute

Science News

View archive | RSS Feed

Uzbek inventor creates eyesight substitute

By MARINA KOZLOVA, UPI Science News
Published: Dec. 26, 2002 at 1:05 AM
Order reprints  |  Print Story  |  Email to a Friend  |  Post a Comment
TASHKENT, Uzbekistan, Dec. 26 (UPI) -- A video signal received from an electronic eye and converted to sound and mechanical oscillations can be used as an eyesight substitute for the blind, its Uzbek inventor told United Press International.

The hand-held device, a cylinder containing an electronic light sensor at its tip, is designed to be pointed at an object a sight-impaired person wishes to "see," explained Vladimir Matveev, a specialist in electronics.

The device then emits sounds and vibrations according to the composition of the object. For example, the pitch of the sound becomes higher if the object is light in color and lower if the object is dark. Users can become accustomed quickly to the signals from the device as it "sees" familiar objects.

"The transmitting capacities of the auditory and tactile systems are not worse than the transmitting capacities of the visual nerve," Matveev said. "The visual nerves may be atrophied and the part of the cerebral cortex processing information from these nerves may also be struck," he said, adding that different parts of the cerebral cortex are able to duplicate one another, so the sound and tactile information sent by the device can be acquired and analyzed correctly by the brain.

Matveev said test subjects who have used the device have claimed they "saw" pictures: a man leaning against a wall, the number of staircase steps or even somebody's shadow. The device has allowed blind subjects to see the Moon and the horizon, and Matveev said he believes it even could allow the blind to read.

"The device may have a visual keenness (that is better than) human beings' eyesight," he said. For example, the device is able to perceive brightness and darkness better than the human eye. It also offers good ergonomics and user-friendliness and is safe to use, Matveev said.

He said he is seeking funding to conduct full-scale clinical trials of the device.

An administrative board of Uzbekistan's Society of the Blind declared the device "an apparatus of social and professional rehabilitation of the blind -- especially blind children."

Sadyk Khasanov, the chairman of the Foundation for Rehabilitation and Help to the Blind and Weakly Seeing Children and Youth, or Panohshulasi, told UPI the device was promising but its effectiveness can be determined only after full-scale tests.

"It is good that (people) inside Uzbekistan have paid attention (to the blind)," Fatima Adylova, head of the Medical Informatics Laboratory of the Institute of Cybernetics, told UPI.

RATE THIS ARTICLE
    Poor    1    2    3    4    5  Excellent    
Feedback


© 2002 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Have an opinion? Leave a comment. No Registration Required.
News Photos Slideshows
Photos of the Day
Week in Photos
News
Entertainment
Sports
Features
Archives
Olympics 2008
Path to the Presidency
Additional News Stories
Top News
    Report: Palin abused power as governor
    Report: Palin abused power as governor
    ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 10 (UPI) --
    Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin violated state ethics law by trying to get her sister's ex-husband fired from the state police, a report released Friday concluded.
  • McCain backer calls Obama 'Arab'
  • Russia: Georgia cease-fire implemented
  • Minister: Mugabe party agrees to mediation
  • Judge: Alaska must preserve Palin e-mails
Science News
  • New Google Earth satellite image released
  • UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
  • Game developer set for space launch
  • NASA plans Mars launch next fall
  • Cape Cod manatee may get air trip to Fla.
Entertainment News
  • VH1 to run AC/DC marathon
  • Co-star: Rourke cut own head for film
  • Adkins, Skynyrd team up for concerts
  • USA Network renews 'Psych,' 'Notice'
  • Aykroyd pitches in on vodka campaign
Health News
  • Tainted milk prompts new Chinese standards
  • Cervical cancer shot gains acceptance
  • WHO probes deadly mystery illness
  • WHO: Mental health stigma unfair
  • Study: Ginkgo can prevent stroke damage
UPI Features - The Voice of Young Voters
Most Popular
Stories
Photos
Videos
People
1.
Former head of MIT math department dies
2.
Report: 1 in 4 mammals face extinction
3.
Shark's pup called 'virgin birth'
4.
New Google Earth satellite image released
5.
International Space Station orbit altered



Explore
Volcanic Eruption in Chaiten
Volcanic Eruption in Chaiten
Images from the Hubble Telescope
Images from the Hubble Telescope
The Great White Shark
The Great White Shark
Nobel Prize in Physics Ceremony
Nobel Prize in Physics Ceremony
© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Official Government Wires  |   About UPI  |   Site Map  |   Terms of Use  |   Privacy Policy  |   Advertise Online  |   Contact Us

Sponsored Links: Auto Dealers - College Football Tickets - Fundraisers - Press Release Services - prom dresses - Prom dresses and gowns - Public Records - Wedding and Honeymoon Experts - Motivational Sports Speakers Bureau