Neuralink technology enables blind people to see with their arms !

  

Closeup of an eye Posted by the manufacturer

Two infrared cameras are linked to a tiny pair of goggles in this setup. These cameras take pictures of the area or room around them. This information is then sent to the sleeve. The data is then used by the sleeve to register and inform users of the distance between items. It's an innovative concept that, once perfected, might open up new possibilities for those with impaired eyesight.


When activated, the gadget allows users to maintain track of their surroundings. The haptic feedback in the sleeve increases as the user approaches an object, according to the study. This serves to warn the user of an approaching item, allowing them to turn aside or slow down.

According to the study's authors, the gadget performed with 98 percent accuracy during testing. All five trial participants were able to finish the designated path in one run. They were also becoming faster with each succeeding run. These findings make the prospect of developing a technology that aids blind individuals in seeing highly promising.


One of the most exciting aspects of this new technology is that it does not deprive users of their other senses. Low-vision users rely on their other senses, such as smell and hearing, to keep track of what's going on around them. Other products that assist persons with limited eyesight are available. However, some of these rely on the wearer's senses, such as hearing, to aid them. As a result, they are unable to use one of their most critical senses.


However, the user does not have to give up their hearing or other senses with this revolutionary technology by Manuel Zahn and Armaghan Ahmad Khan. As a result, if it's made smaller, it may be a better method for persons with impaired eyesight to navigate about. The gadget is still in its early phases of development. Zahn and Khan believe they can build the new gadget smaller than Microsoft's Kinect, based on the study. The Kinect was a motion-detection device for the Microsoft Xbox that is mentioned several times throughout the article.


We've seen brain implants that let people see shapes in the past. However, if they can create a gadget that both helps blind people see and is tiny enough to use without surgery, it might transform how individuals with impaired vision get around.

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