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Medical Madness
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10/21/07 Computer Simulator Helps Visually Impaired Drive
team of researchers from the University of Granada [
http://www.ugr.es
    ], in collaboration with the University of Murcia, has developed a 
visual aid device which significantly improves the vision of sight impaired 
patients;
especially those suffering from pathologies with a slow progression that can 
eventually lead to blindness (such as Macular Degeneration, cataracts, 
etc.).
This platform, called SERBA (in Spanish, Reconfigurable Electric-optical 
System for Low Vision), is the first visual aid unit which is very useful in 
all
circumstances and for all tasks, independently of the degree of impairment 
of the patient. Up to now, in the majority of cases, people with impaired 
vision
had to acquire various different devices to meet all their needs.

The main contribution of this project undertaken by Mª Dolores Pelaez Coca 
and led by professors Fernando Vargas Martín and Eduardo Ros Vidal, all from
the University of Granada is the implementation of a new optoelectronic 
platform (based on a reconfigurable device known as FPGA) which is easily 
reprogrammed
so that it can be used in different circumstances. This device will help 
patients, among other things, to improve their vision when driving.

This platform, as the creator of the research explains, is based on the 
design of a real-time video processing system able to store several image 
processing
algorithms. "Thanks to the use of a FPGA it is a very flexible device which 
can be adapted to the user's needs and to the evolution of their disease".
Eight patients suffering from Retinitis Pigmentosa (a visual impairment that 
reduces the field of vision) took part in the device's assessment, as well
as six others with different pathologies that generate a loss of sharpness 
of vision.

Updating through the Internet

The program is stored in the internal memory of the prototype board and the 
selection of the dump algorithm in the FPGA is carried out automatically. In
this way, the images are shown in a transparent viewfinder, similar to those 
used in the army. With this system, there is no need to purchase a new 
platform
so as to adapt it to the changes that are produced in the disease's 
development; it is enough simply to update the programmes recorded in the 
device's
memory. This update can be carried out through the Internet, so the support 
and travelling expenses can be reduced considerably.

So as to prove the viability of the project, researchers from the University 
of Granada have developed three different image processing computer 
programmes:
edge enhancement, three different kinds of digital zoom lens and the 
implementation of an augmented view scheme system.

The main advantage of SERBA is that it is easily reconfigured and that it 
also offers, in researchers' own words, a "technological convergence", as it
includes light low-cost cameras, real time image processing and transparent 
portable viewfinders.

A driving video game

This visual aid system designed by scientists from the University of Granada 
[
http://www.ugr.es
] and the University of Murcia has contributed to the creation of bioptical 
telescopes, anamorphic systems and inverted telescopes that magnify the 
patient's
visibility as it implements zoom lens effects, edge enhancement and edge 
multiplexing to expand the field of vision. Moreover, a driving video game 
(with
some enlargements in some areas of the image) has been developed to simulate 
the visual aids previously mentioned. The selection of the area to magnify
is supplied by a Head Tracker that the subject carries in a cap.

Several companies have already shown their interest in commercialising this 
system created by the University of Granada, as SERBA is improving the 
sharpness
of vision and contrast sensitivity, apart from offering an effective field 
of vision for very restricted visual fields and facilitating the subject's 
mobility.

Source: Medical News Today

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© 2007: Eyenet Industries


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