Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.

Simulation in normally sighted individuals is a crucial tool to evaluate the performance of potential visual prosthesis designs prior to human implantation of a device. Here, we investigated the effects of electrode count on visual acuity, learning rate and response time in 16 normally sighted subje...

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Main Authors: Béchir Bourkiza, Milena Vurro, Ailsa Jeffries, John S Pezaris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3785446?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9f8945dca9cc44489fdde12595765a822020-11-25T01:49:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0189e7359210.1371/journal.pone.0073592Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.Béchir BourkizaMilena VurroAilsa JeffriesJohn S PezarisSimulation in normally sighted individuals is a crucial tool to evaluate the performance of potential visual prosthesis designs prior to human implantation of a device. Here, we investigated the effects of electrode count on visual acuity, learning rate and response time in 16 normally sighted subjects using a simulated thalamic visual prosthesis, providing the first performance reports for thalamic designs. A new letter recognition paradigm using a multiple-optotype two-alternative forced choice task was adapted from the Snellen eye chart, and specifically devised to be readily communicated to both human and non-human primate subjects. Validation of the method against a standard Snellen acuity test in 21 human subjects showed no significant differences between the two tests. The novel task was then used to address three questions about simulations of the center-weighted phosphene patterns typical of thalamic designs: What are the expected Snellen acuities for devices with varying numbers of contacts, do subjects display rapid adaptation to the new visual modality, and can response time in the task provide clues to the mechanisms of perception in low-resolution artificial vision? Population performance (hit rate) was significantly above chance when viewing Snellen 20/200 optotypes (Log MAR 1.0) with 370 phosphenes in the central 10 degrees of vision, ranging to Snellen 20/800 (Log MAR 1.6) with 25 central phosphenes. Furthermore, subjects demonstrated learning within the 1-2 hours of task experience indicating the potential for an effective rehabilitation and possibly better visual performance after a longer period of training. Response time differences suggest that direct letter perception occurred when hit rate was above 75%, whereas a slower strategy like feature-based pattern matching was used in conditions of lower relative resolution. As pattern matching can substantially boost effective acuity, these results suggest post-implant therapy should specifically address feature detection skills.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3785446?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Béchir Bourkiza
Milena Vurro
Ailsa Jeffries
John S Pezaris
spellingShingle Béchir Bourkiza
Milena Vurro
Ailsa Jeffries
John S Pezaris
Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Béchir Bourkiza
Milena Vurro
Ailsa Jeffries
John S Pezaris
author_sort Béchir Bourkiza
title Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
title_short Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
title_full Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
title_fullStr Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
title_full_unstemmed Visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
title_sort visual acuity of simulated thalamic visual prostheses in normally sighted humans.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Simulation in normally sighted individuals is a crucial tool to evaluate the performance of potential visual prosthesis designs prior to human implantation of a device. Here, we investigated the effects of electrode count on visual acuity, learning rate and response time in 16 normally sighted subjects using a simulated thalamic visual prosthesis, providing the first performance reports for thalamic designs. A new letter recognition paradigm using a multiple-optotype two-alternative forced choice task was adapted from the Snellen eye chart, and specifically devised to be readily communicated to both human and non-human primate subjects. Validation of the method against a standard Snellen acuity test in 21 human subjects showed no significant differences between the two tests. The novel task was then used to address three questions about simulations of the center-weighted phosphene patterns typical of thalamic designs: What are the expected Snellen acuities for devices with varying numbers of contacts, do subjects display rapid adaptation to the new visual modality, and can response time in the task provide clues to the mechanisms of perception in low-resolution artificial vision? Population performance (hit rate) was significantly above chance when viewing Snellen 20/200 optotypes (Log MAR 1.0) with 370 phosphenes in the central 10 degrees of vision, ranging to Snellen 20/800 (Log MAR 1.6) with 25 central phosphenes. Furthermore, subjects demonstrated learning within the 1-2 hours of task experience indicating the potential for an effective rehabilitation and possibly better visual performance after a longer period of training. Response time differences suggest that direct letter perception occurred when hit rate was above 75%, whereas a slower strategy like feature-based pattern matching was used in conditions of lower relative resolution. As pattern matching can substantially boost effective acuity, these results suggest post-implant therapy should specifically address feature detection skills.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3785446?pdf=render
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