Souped-Up Contact Lenses Promise On-Demand Bionic
Eyesight An inventor at the University of Washington holds a flexible
contact lens embedded with microcircuits. Researchers will place circuitry
outside of the transparent part of the wearer’s eye. The lens will not
obstruct a user’s sight when it isn’t activated. By Erik Sofge Published in
the April 2008 issue. Most advances in retinal implants concentrate on
restoring, not enhancing, sight. But there’s hope yet for superhuman vision,
and without surgery: A team at the University of Washington has created a
contact lens assembled with functional circuitry and LEDs. Potential uses
include virtual displays for pilots, video-game projections and telescopic
vision for soldiers. A working prototype of a lens-embedded antenna that
draws power for the device from radio frequencies has also been created. The
next steps are to build a version that can display several pixels—and then
to test it on a person. The UW team uses a technique called self-assembly to
manufacture the eyewear. Researchers dust a specially designed contact lens
with microscale components that automatically bond to predetermined receptor
sites. The shape of each component dictates where it attaches. “There’s a
lot of room to expand,” Babak Parviz, an assistant professor of electrical
engineering at UW, says of the technology. “You can let your imagination run
wild.” http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/health_medicine/4252012.html