Jan. 18, 2007

Technology May Give Blind A Touch Of Sight

BrainPort Transforms Images Into Electrical Impulses Felt On The Tongue

  • Play CBS Video Video Blind Learn To See With Tongue

    Daniel Sieberg reports on a revolutionary technology. Brainport sends electrical impulses to the tongue, using tiny cameras as eyes, essentially creating a picture for blind people.

  • Video Helping The Blind To See

    Only On The Web: Roger Behm, who is blind, tests a new device that helps him "see" with his tongue. Behm also shows CBS News' Daniel Sieberg how he canes chair seats.

  • Video First Look: The Blind Can See

    Only On The Web: Daniel Sieberg and executive producer Rome Hartman preview tonight's broadcast. Sieberg reports about a new technology that allows blind people to "see" with their tongues.

  • Roger Behm is blind but can navigate an obstacle course with the help of BrainPort.

    Roger Behm is blind but can navigate an obstacle course with the help of BrainPort.  (CBS)

  • Quiz Medical Exam

    Give your brain a checkup with these health quizzes.

(CBS)  At first glance, Roger Behm looks like an independent guy who sees the world with a rather sharp sense of humor. But he's actually seen nothing since he was a young man, CBS News technology correspondent Daniel Sieberg reports.

However, part of his world is coming back into focus, through experimental technology called BrainPort.

One day it could actually help blind people see, in a sense, by using their tongues. BrainPort swaps tiny cameras for eyes and transforms the images into electrical impulses that are felt on the tongue.

"It is as if it's drawing on the tongue. So if you capture the image fast enough ... it is like a video display. Instead of being on a screen, now it is on your tongue," says Rich Hogle of BrainPort.

In normal vision, the eyes send signals to the middle of the brain. From there, the signals are sent directly to the visual cortex at the back of the brain. That's not so for the blind, however.

BrainPort retrains the way the brain processes information by first stimulating the tongue with an array of tiny electrodes. The nerves in the tongue send signals through a different pathway to the brain stem and the area that deals with to touch. Eventually the blind person learns to interpret touch as sight.

Roger Behm uses the Brainport, then gives a chair caning demonstration in his workshop.
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"you know when you're a kid and — I don't know if you did it or not — but one kid would draw on your back and you'd try to guess what it is? That's what it's like," Behm explains.

Sound impossible? Behm is able to walk through the BrainPort office without any guidance. He can navigate an obstacle course and pick out specific shapes. Behm can even spot the logo on a football jersey.

"It's like learning a language. At first you might need to take a long time thinking about what the translation is. I might feel stimulation in the right front part of my tongue, (but) what does that mean?," says Aimee Arnoldussen, a BrainPort researcher. "But very rapidly, like learning a language, you might learn a few quick vocabulary (words), and eventually you become so fluent that you don't need to think about it anymore."

Sieberg put on a blindfold and tried out BrainPort. After a humbling first attempt, he managed to understand some of the BrainPort language.

For the blind, it's a glimpse at more freedom.

Behm says he hopes "this develops to the point where the next generation can get benefit from it, even if I don't get the greatest out of it. I still am determined that if I can see their eyes and maybe I can see a smile or a grin — that'd be cool."

For the rest of us, it's a miraculous look at how our brains can be trained to rewire themselves.



© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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by michellem99-2009 January 19, 2007 8:36 PM EST
I am a blind person and I found the artcle dumb.I don't see with my tongue nor would want that on my tongue. What will the sighted world come up with next? I wear a hat on my head not a gadget. I wish sighted people would stop and think about
this.You maybe well meaning here but you have no clue to how you make blind people look with your crazy gadgits. Yes. I use a white cane but I don't want to be preyed on, made a target just because of it. It won't work that tongue gadgit.
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by wesrscc January 19, 2007 6:23 PM EST
As a reseach engineer at GE's Reasearch Labbatory,NY I developed and used a tactile vision aid for the blind in 1970.The system was essentially the same as reported by BrainPort with one significant difference. My tactile electrodes were embodied in a plastic sheet which was held against the skin of the user's abdomen. The electrodes consisted of an array of 32X32 elements. The experiment was a success but the tongue has a much better tactile sense resolution. The technology at that time was the limiting factor but in my case the user could talk and his hands were free.
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by meijerpb January 19, 2007 6:23 AM EST
Thanks for this feature about the tongue display. There nowadays exist several approaches aimed at sensory substitution for the blind. These include the tongue display (wicab.com), forehead display (eyeplus2.com) and auditory display (seeingwithsound.com). It seems good that these new options become generally available and affordable for blind people, such that they can compare them and decide for themselves what suits them best.
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