AI brings object-level vision prosthetics closer to reality

Robohub 

This research from the NeuroAI Lab of Martin Schrimpf, part of EPFL's Schools of Computer and Communication Sciences and Life Sciences, uses AI models to predict exactly where to stimulate the brain to evoke images of faces and specific objects in the users instead of simply evoking spots of light. The models developed at EPFL were used by Dutch researchers for live trials on sighted monkeys. The preliminary results, presented in April at the International Conference on Learning Representations, show very promising implications for vision in humans as well. "The motivation for this project is that there are many people with visual deficits that are irreparable, in the sense that somewhere along the visual processing stream, starting with the retina, there is a deficit which cannot be repaired," says Johannes Mehrer, a scientist in the NeuroAI lab who led the research. "One way of tackling this problem is to develop a visual prosthesis."