Authors
Gerald Dumm, James B Fallon, Chris E Williams, Mohit N Shivdasani
Publication date
2014/12/1
Journal
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science
Volume
55
Issue
12
Pages
8077-8085
Publisher
The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
Description
Purpose.: Retinal prostheses are an approved treatment for vision restoration in retinal degenerative diseases; however, present implants have limited resolution and simply increasing the number of electrodes is limited by design issues. In cochlear implants, virtual electrodes can be created by simultaneous stimulation of adjacent physical electrodes (current steering). The present study assessed whether this type of current steering can be adapted for retinal implants.
Methods.: Suprachoroidal electrode arrays were implanted in four normally sighted cat eyes. Electrode pairs were driven simultaneously at different current levels and current ratios. Multiunit spiking activity in the visual cortex was recorded. Spike distribution across channels enabled generation of cortical activation maps and calculation of centroid positions. For each current configuration, centroid shifts between two virtual electrodes were compared to shifts obtained from physical electrode stimulation.
Results.: Using current steering, virtual electrodes with different cortical activation maps could be created. Cortical centroids were found to shift as a function of the current ratio used for virtual electrodes and were similar to the centroid shifts seen when using physical electrodes. In addition, the cortical response to stimulation of a physical electrode could be reproduced by applying current steering to electrodes on either side of the physical electrode.
Conclusions.: These results suggest that current steering can alter activation patterns in the visual cortex and could enhance visual perception in retinal implants by eliciting phosphene percepts intermediate between those elicited by …
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Scholar articles
G Dumm, JB Fallon, CE Williams, MN Shivdasani - Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 2014