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An Electronic Microsaccade Circuit with Charge-Balanced Stimulation and Flicker Vision Prevention for an Artificial Eyeball System

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TLDR
In this paper , the authors proposed an electronic microsaccade (E-μSaccade) circuit, which is intrinsically safe because only charge-balanced stimulus pulses are allowed for stimulation.
Abstract
This paper presents the first circuit that enables microsaccade function in an artificial eyeball system. Currently, the artificial eyeball is receiving increasing development in vision restoration. The main challenge is that the human eye is born with microsaccade that helps refresh vision, avoiding perception fading while the gaze is fixed for a long period, and without microsaccade, high-quality vision restoration is difficult. The proposed electronic microsaccade (E-μSaccade) circuit addresses the issue, and it is intrinsically safe because only charge-balanced stimulus pulses are allowed for stimulation. The E-μSaccade circuit adopts light-to-frequency modulation; due to the circuit’s leakage and dark current of light-sensitive elements, stimulus pulses of a frequency lower than tens of Hz occur, which is the cause of flickering vision. A flicker vision prevention (FVP) circuit is proposed to mitigate the issue. The proposed circuits are designed in a 0.18 μm standard CMOS process. The simulation and measurement results show that the E-μSaccade circuit helps refresh the stimulation pattern and blocks the low-frequency output.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of fixational eye movements in visual perception

TL;DR: Current studies of fixational eye movements have focused on determining how visible perception is encoded by neurons in various visual areas of the brain to elucidate how the brain makes the authors' environment visible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Artificial vision for the blind by connecting a television camera to the visual cortex.

Wm. H. Dobelle
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
TL;DR: The development of the first visual prosthesis providing useful "artificial vision" to a blind volunteer by connecting a digital video camera, computer, and associated electronics to the visual cortex of his brain is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eye movements: The past 25 years

TL;DR: This article reviews the past 25 years of research on eye movements, focusing on three oculomotor behaviors: gaze control, smooth pursuit and saccades, and on their interactions with vision.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microsaccades: Small steps on a long way

TL;DR: The accumulated evidence demonstrates that microsaccades serve both perceptual and oculomotor goals and although in some cases their contribution is neither necessary nor unique, micros Accades are a malleable tool conveniently employed by the visual system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in prevalence of blindness and distance and near vision impairment over 30 years: an analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study

TL;DR: Age-adjusted prevalence of blindness has reduced over the past three decades, yet due to population growth, progress is not keeping pace with needs, and face enormous challenges in avoiding vision impairment as the global population grows and ages.
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