DocumentCode
1497650
Title
Resolution of the Epiretinal Prosthesis is not Limited by Electrode Size
Author
Behrend, Matthew R. ; Ahuja, Ashish K. ; Humayun, Mark S. ; Chow, Robert H. ; Weiland, James D.
Author_Institution
Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Volume
19
Issue
4
fYear
2011
Firstpage
436
Lastpage
442
Abstract
Epiretinal prostheses for the blind bypass diseased photosensitive cells in the retina, directly stimulating retinal neurons electrically and evoking signals that are relayed to the brain. Current clinical implants have few electrodes and provide limited visual acuity. Acuity may be improved by identifying electrode array design features and operational details that enhance or interfere with visual percept formation. We labeled all retinal ganglion cells in whole mount retina with a calcium reporter and then measured the number and pattern of cells responding, over a range of electrode diameters and stimulus durations. Span of the response scaled with electrode diameter for electrodes 60 μm and larger. Short stimulation pulse widths selectively activated cells nearest the electrode. Our measurements in the salamander retina suggest that the spatial resolution is 150 μm, which on a human retina is equivalent to 0.55° of human visual field and corresponding Snellen acuity of 20/660. Reading large print could be possible with such a prosthesis.
Keywords
biomedical electrodes; biomedical electronics; brain; cellular biophysics; neurophysiology; prosthetics; visual evoked potentials; Snellen acuity; blind bypass diseased photosensitive cell; brainclinical implant; calcium imaging; calcium reporter; electrical signal; electrical stimulation; electrode array design feature; electrode diameter; electrode size; epiretinal prosthesis; human retina; human visual field; large print reading; retinal ganglion cell; retinal neuron; salamander retina; stimulus duration; visual acuity; visual percept formation; whole mount retina; Calcium; Electrodes; Nerve fibers; Optical pulses; Retina; Visualization; Artificial vision; calcium imaging; electrical stimulation; neural stimulation; retina; visual acuity; Algorithms; Animals; Electric Stimulation; Electrodes; Gels; Prosthesis Design; Retina; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Sensory Thresholds; Urodela; Vision, Ocular; Visual Acuity; Visual Prosthesis;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2011.2140132
Filename
5752253
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