西醫藉助現代科技的發展可說是日新月異,幫助盲人的小設備就有不少。下面就是一例,雖然還不是那麼完美,還有許多缺陷,但對盲人來說可是極大的幫助。這也是只有知道視覺是怎麼回事以後才能成為可能的事!中醫呢?中醫在幹什麼?中醫在哪裡?

This Sensory Substitution Device uses the camera to gather visual
data and then uses a rather nifty computer algorithm to translates this
data into sound. With a little practice, blind users can identify
complex objects, and even read words.
The invention is the invention of Hebrew University of Jerusalem's
Dr. Amir Amedi, who you can see modeling the device in the picture up
top. Amedi says that with only a relatively brief period of training,
users can learn how to interpret a ton of information the "soundscapes"
created by the computer algorithm, including the nature of complex
everyday objects, the location and posture of people in a room, and even
written letters and words.
What makes this particularly cool is that the sounds being created
actually activate the ohterwise dormant visual cortices of congenitally
blind people. Previous research had indicated that the visual cortex
organizes data into two parallel pathways. The ventral occipito-temporal
pathway, called the "what" pathway, deals with form, identity, and
color, while the dorsal occipito-parietal pathway, or the "where/how"
pathway, focuses on object location and coordinates visual data with
motor function.
MRI scans revealed that blind people using this device activated
these pathways just as people with normal vision would, indicating the
proper functioning of the visual cortex doesn't actually require any
visual information. In a statement, Amedi argued that this means that
"The brain is not a sensory machine, although it often looks like one;
it is a task machine."
This is one of a few recent studies that have suggested that actual
visual, auditory, or tactile data aren't necessary for the brain to
interpret what is going on around it. The various pathways of the brain
seem to stand ready to interpret data, even if the corresponding sensory
organs or receptors don't actually work. It seems, as far as the visual
cortex concerned, no experience is required.
http://www.computervisiononline.com/news/new-device-hacks-blind-people%E2%80%99s-visual-cortex-let-them-see