DocumentCode
3598241
Title
Psychophysics of Prosthetic Vision: I. Visual Scanning and Visual Acuity
Author
Chen, S.C. ; Hallum, L.E. ; Suaning, G.J. ; Lovell, N.H.
Author_Institution
Graduate Sch. of Biomed. Eng., New South Wales Univ., Sydney, NSW
fYear
2006
Firstpage
4400
Lastpage
4403
Abstract
Recipients of vision prosthesis prototypes have reported electrically elicited visual perceptions as discrete dots of light (phosphenes). Phosphenes construct the scenery in discontinuous small isolated patches, resulting in visual information deficit to a large portion of the visual field. Visual scanning therefore plays an important role in the utility of prosthetic vision. In a psychophysical study, normally sighted subjects undertook a visual acuity task in a simulation of prosthetic vision with scanning facilitated by head movements. Subjects who adopted the circular scanning technique (4/12) correctly identified >60% of the test items, compared to subjects with no particular scanning patterns (3/12) with <50%. Increased head movement velocity was correlated to increased performance; at optimal scanning velocities, we estimated a 50% increase in identification rate or a two-fold improvement in visual acuity threshold compared to otherwise complete lack of scanning movement. Improved performance likely resulted from positive interactions with the temporal processes of the human visual system, which may as much as double the spatial information of that originally afforded by the phosphene lattice
Keywords
neurophysiology; prosthetics; vision defects; visual perception; electrically elicited visual perception; head movement; phosphenes; prosthetic vision; psychophysics; vision prosthesis prototype; visual acuity task; visual field; visual information; visual scanning; Australia; Head; Humans; Image restoration; Implants; Prosthetics; Prototypes; Psychology; Visual perception; Visual system; vision prosthesis; visual acuity; visual scanning;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2006. EMBS '06. 28th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
ISSN
1557-170X
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0032-5
Electronic_ISBN
1557-170X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.2006.260816
Filename
4462777
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