Please  give  more  information  regarding  the  new  device
-----Original message-----
From: Vikas Kapoor
Sent:  07/07/2012, 11:30 
To: Access India
Subject: [AI] New device can help visually impaired 'see' using music


New device can help visually impaired 'see' using music

 Published: Friday, Jul 6, 2012, 15:50 IST 
Place: Washington, DC | 


New device can help visually impaired 'see' using music

 Published: Friday, Jul 6, 2012, 15:50 IST 
Place: Washington, DC | Agency: ANI 














Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have developed a new device 
that converts images into music to help individuals without vision reach for 
objects in space.

Sensory substitution devices (SSDs) use sound or touch to help the visually 
impaired perceive the visual scene surrounding them. The ideal SSD would assist 
not only in sensing the environment but also in performing daily activities 
based on this input. For example, accurately reaching for a coffee cup, or 
shaking a friend's hand.

In a new study, Hebrew scientists trained blindfolded sighted participants to 
perform fast and accurate movements using their new SSD, called EyeMusic.

The EyeMusic employs pleasant musical tones and scales to help the visually 
impaired "see" using music. This non-invasive SSD converts images into a 
combination of musical notes, or "soundscapes.

The device was developed by the senior author Prof. Amir Amedi and his team at 
the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences (ELSC) and the Institute 
for Medical Research Israel-Canada at the Hebrew University.

The EyeMusic scans an image and represents pixels at high vertical locations as 
high-pitched musical notes and low vertical locations as low-pitched notes 
according to a musical scale that will sound pleasant in many possible 
combinations.

The image is scanned continuously, from left to right, and an auditory cue is 
used to mark the start of the scan. The horizontal location of a pixel is 
indicated by the timing of the musical notes relative to the cue (the later it 
is sounded after the cue, the farther it is to the right), and the brightness 
is encoded by the loudness of the sound.

The EyeMusic's algorithm uses different musical instruments for each of the 
five colours: white (vocals), blue (trumpet), red (reggae organ), green 
(synthesized reed), yellow (violin); Black is represented by silence.

Prof. Amedi said "The notes played span five octaves and were carefully chosen 
by musicians to create a pleasant experience for the users."

"We demonstrated in this study that the EyeMusic, which employs pleasant 
musical scales to convey visual information, can be used after a short training 
period (in some cases, less than half an hour) to guide movements, similar to 
movements guided visually," explained lead investigators Dr. Shelly 
Levy-Tzedek, an ELSC researcher at the Faculty of Medicine, Hebrew University, 
Jerusalem, and Prof. Amir Amedi.

"The level of accuracy reached in our study indicates that performing daily 
tasks with an SSD is feasible, and indicates a potential for rehabilitative 
use," they added

The study tested the ability of 18 blindfolded sighted individuals to perform 
movements guided by the EyeMusic, and compared those movements to those 
performed with visual guidance. At first, the blindfolded participants 
underwent a short familiarization session, where they learned to identify the 
location of a single object (a white square) or of two adjacent objects (a 
white and a blue square)

In the test sessions, participants used a stylus on a digitizing tablet to 
point to a white square located either in the north, the south, the east or the 
west. In one block of trials they were blindfolded (SSD block), and in the 
other block (VIS block) the arm was placed under an opaque cover, so they could 
see the screen but did not have direct visual feedback from the hand.

The endpoint location of their hand was marked by a blue square. In the SSD 
block, they received feedback via the EyeMusic. In the VIS block, the feedback 
was visual.

"Participants were able to use auditory information to create a relatively 
precise spatial representation," notes Dr Levy-Tzedek.

The study lends support to the hypothesis that representation of space in the 
brain may not be dependent on the modality with which the spatial information 
is received, and that very little training is required to create a 
representation of space without vision, using sounds to guide fast and accurate 
movements.

"SSDs may have great potential to provide detailed spatial information for the 
visually impaired, allowing them to interact with their external environment 
and successfully make movements based on this information, but further research 
is now required to evaluate the use of our device in the blind," concluded Dr. 
Levy-Tzedek.

Their results were published in the July issue of Restorative Neurology and 
Neuroscience.


http://www.dnaindia.com/health/report_new-device-can-help-visually-impaired-see-using-music_1711345

Vikas Kapoor,
MSN Id: dl_vi...@hotmail.com, Yahoo&Skype Id: dl_vikas,
Mobile: (+91) 9891098137.

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