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High-tech contact lenses zoom with a wink of an eye

Swiss Researchers Are Developing Contact Lenses That Contain Tiny Telescopes To Boost Vision And Zoom In And Out With The Wink Of An Eye, Optic Specialists Said.

PTI | Updated on: 14 Feb 2015, 08:03:42 PM

Donetsk:

Swiss researchers are developing contact lenses that contain tiny telescopes to boost vision and zoom in and out with the wink of an eye, optic specialists said.

The latest advances in vision aids—some of which could potentially help the 285 million people worldwide with some form of vision impairment—were discussed at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in California.

The new contact contains an extremely thin, reflective telescope, which is activated by winks and embedded inside a 1.55 millimeter-thick lens.

First released in 2013 and fine-tuned since then, the prototype was unveiled by Eric Tremblay from the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland.

The lenses come with smart glasses that respond to the wearer’s winks—but not blinks—so that the user can switch almost effortlessly from normal to magnified vision and back.

The wearer winks with the right eye to activate the telescope, and with the left eye to deactivate it.

“We think these lenses hold a lot of promise for low vision and age-related macular degeneration,” a vision disorder that affects older people, Tremblay said.

“At this point this is still research, but we are hopeful it will eventually become a real option for people with AMD.”

The device magnifies objects 2.8 times, meaning AMD patients can read more easily and recognize faces and objects.

Funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the lenses were meant to serve as a form of bionic vision for soldiers.

“Small mirrors within bounce light around, expanding the perceived size of objects and magnifying the view, so it’s like looking through low magnification binoculars,” the researchers said in a statement.

Tremblay was careful to stress that the device was still at the research stage, though it could eventually become a “real option” for people with AMD.

“It’s very important and hard to strike a balance between function and the social costs of wearing any kind of bulky visual device,” he said.

“There is a strong need for something more integrated, and a contact lens is an attractive direction.”

The contacts are made using large, rigid “scleral lenses,” unlike the soft contacts most people wear, but are nonetheless safe and comfortable, Tremblay said.

Several precision-cut pieces of plastic, aluminum mirrors and polarizing thin films form the lens, along with biologically safe glues.

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First Published : 14 Feb 2015, 04:35:00 PM

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