Cortical Interactions between Prosthetic and Natural Vision

Tamar Arens-Arad, Nairouz Farah, Rivkah Lender, Avital Moshkovitz, Thomas Flores, Daniel Palanker, Yossi Mandel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Outer retinal degenerative diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and age-related macular degeneration (AMD), are among the leading causes of incurable blindness in the Western world [1]. Retinal prostheses have been shown to restore some useful vision by electrically stimulating the remaining retinal neurons [2]. In contrast to inherited retinal degenerative diseases (e.g., RP), typically leading to a complete loss of the visual field, in AMD patients the disease is localized to the macula, leaving the peripheral vision intact. Implanting a retinal prosthesis in the central macula in AMD patients [3, 4] leads to an intriguing situation where the patient's central retina is stimulated electrically, whereas the peripheral healthy retina responds to natural light stimulation. An important question is whether the visual cortex responds to these two concurrent stimuli similarly to the interaction between two adjacent natural light stimuli projected onto healthy retina. Here, we investigated the cortical interactions between prosthetic and natural vision based on visually evoked potentials (VEPs) recorded in rats implanted with photovoltaic subretinal implants. Using this model, where prosthetic and natural vision information are combined in the visual cortex, we observed striking similarities in the interactions of natural and prosthetic vision, including similar effect of background illumination, linear summation of non-patterned stimuli, and lateral inhibition with spatial patterns [5], which increased with target contrast. These results support the idea of combined prosthetic and natural vision in restoration of sight for AMD patients.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)176-182.e2
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume30
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 6 Jan 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd

Funding

The project was supported by Israeli Science Foundation (ISF no. 157/16), ERC starter grant 755748, Israeli Ministry of Defense, and Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology. Conceptualization, T.A.-A. D.P. and Y.M.; Methodology, T.A.-A. N.F. and Y.M.; Conducted Experiments, T.A.-A. R.L. and A.M.; Resources, T.F. and D.P.; Writing – Original Draft, T.A.-A. N.F. R.L. and Y.M.; Writing – Review & Editing, Y.M. T.F. and D.P.; Visualization, T.A.-A. and N.F.; Supervision and Funding, Y.M. D.P. is the author of the patents owned by Stanford University and licensed to Pixium Vision for commercial development of the photovoltaic retinal prosthesis. He also serves as a consultant to Pixium Vision. The project was supported by Israeli Science Foundation (ISF no. 157/16 ), ERC starter grant 755748 , Israeli Ministry of Defense , and Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology .

FundersFunder number
National Eye InstituteR01EY027786
Stanford University
European Commission755748
Israel Science Foundation157/16
Ministry of science and technology, Israel
Ministry of Defense

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