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FEATURE

Augmented Reality in a Contact Lens

A new generation of contact lenses built with very small circuits and LEDs promises bionic eyesight

By Babak A. Parviz  /  September 2009


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Image: Raygun Studio

The human eye is a perceptual powerhouse. It can see millions of colors, adjust easily to shifting light conditions, and transmit information to the brain at a rate exceeding that of a high-speed Internet connection.

But why stop there?

In the Terminator movies, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s character sees the world with data superimposed on his visual field—virtual captions that enhance the cyborg’s scan of a scene. In stories by the science fiction author Vernor Vinge, characters rely on electronic contact lenses, rather than smartphones or brain implants, for seamless access to information that appears right before their eyes.

These visions (if I may) might seem far-fetched, but a contact lens with simple built-in electronics is already within reach; in fact, my students and I are already producing such devices in small numbers in my laboratory at the University of Washington, in Seattle [see sidebar, "A Twinkle in the Eye"]. These lenses don’t give us the vision of an eagle or the benefit of running subtitles on our surroundings yet. But we have built a lens with one LED, which we’ve powered wirelessly with RF. What we’ve done so far barely hints at what will soon be possible with this technology.

Conventional contact lenses are polymers formed in specific shapes to correct faulty vision. To turn such a lens into a functional system, we integrate control circuits, communication circuits, and miniature antennas into the lens using custom-built optoelectronic components. Those components will eventually include hundreds of LEDs, which will form images in front of the eye, such as words, charts, and photographs. Much of the hardware is semitransparent so that wearers can navigate their surroundings without crashing into them or becoming disoriented. In all likelihood, a separate, portable device will relay displayable information to the lens’s control circuit, which will operate the optoelectronics in the lens.

These lenses don’t need to be very complex to be useful. Even a lens with a single pixel could aid people with impaired hearing or be incorporated as an indicator into computer games. With more colors and resolution, the repertoire could be expanded to include displaying text, translating speech into captions in real time, or offering visual cues from a navigation system. With basic image processing and Internet access, a contact-lens display could unlock whole new worlds of visual information, unfettered by the constraints of a physical display.

Besides visual enhancement, noninvasive monitoring of the wearer’s biomarkers and health indicators could be a huge future market. We’ve built several simple sensors that can detect the concentration of a molecule, such as glucose. Sensors built onto lenses would let diabetic wearers keep tabs on blood-sugar levels without needing to prick a finger. The glucose detectors we’re evaluating now are a mere glimmer of what will be possible in the next 5 to 10 years. Contact lenses are worn daily by more than a hundred million people, and they are one of the only disposable, mass-market products that remain in contact, through fluids, with the interior of the body for an extended period of time. When you get a blood test, your doctor is probably measuring many of the same biomarkers that are found in the live cells on the surface of your eye—and in concentrations that correlate closely with the levels in your bloodstream. An appropriately configured contact lens could monitor cholesterol, sodium, and potassium levels, to name a few potential targets. Coupled with a wireless data transmitter, the lens could relay information to medics or nurses instantly, without needles or laboratory chemistry, and with a much lower chance of mix-ups.

Three fundamental challenges stand in the way of building a multipurpose contact lens. First, the processes for making many of the lens’s parts and subsystems are incompatible with one another and with the fragile polymer of the lens. To get around this problem, my colleagues and I make all our devices from scratch. To fabricate the components for silicon circuits and LEDs, we use high temperatures and corrosive chemicals, which means we can’t manufacture them directly onto a lens. That leads to the second challenge, which is that all the key components of the lens need to be miniaturized and integrated onto about 1.5 square centimeters of a flexible, transparent polymer. We haven’t fully solved that problem yet, but we have so far developed our own specialized assembly process, which enables us to integrate several different kinds of components onto a lens. Last but not least, the whole contraption needs to be completely safe for the eye. Take an LED, for example. Most red LEDs are made of aluminum gallium arsenide, which is toxic. So before an LED can go into the eye, it must be enveloped in a biocompatible substance.

So far, besides our glucose monitor, we’ve been able to batch-fabricate a few other nanoscale biosensors that respond to a target molecule with an electrical signal; we’ve also made several microscale components, including single-crystal silicon transistors, radio chips, antennas, diffusion resistors, LEDs, and silicon photodetectors. We’ve constructed all the micrometer-scale metal interconnects necessary to form a circuit on a contact lens. We’ve also shown that these microcomponents can be integrated through a self-assembly process onto other unconventional substrates, such as thin, flexible transparent plastics or glass. We’ve fabricated prototype lenses with an LED, a small radio chip, and an antenna, and we’ve transmitted energy to the lens wirelessly, lighting the LED. To demonstrate that the lenses can be safe, we encapsulated them in a biocompatible polymer and successfully tested them in trials with live rabbits.

 

Photos: University of Washington

Second Sight:

In recent trials, rabbits wore lenses containing metal circuit structures for 20 minutes at a time with no adverse effects.

 

Seeing the light—LED light—is a reasonable accomplishment. But seeing something useful through the lens is clearly the ultimate goal. Fortunately, the human eye is an extremely sensitive photodetector. At high noon on a cloudless day, lots of light streams through your pupil, and the world appears bright indeed. But the eye doesn’t need all that optical power—it can perceive images with only a few microwatts of optical power passing through its lens. An LCD computer screen is similarly wasteful. It sends out a lot of photons, but only a small fraction of them enter your eye and hit the retina to form an image. But when the display is directly over your cornea, every photon generated by the display helps form the image.

The beauty of this approach is obvious: With the light coming from a lens on your pupil rather than from an external source, you need much less power to form an image. But how to get light from a lens? We’ve considered two basic approaches. One option is to build into the lens a display based on an array of LED pixels; we call this an active display. An alternative is to use passive pixels that merely modulate incoming light rather than producing their own. Basically, they construct an image by changing their color and transparency in reaction to a light source. (They’re similar to LCDs, in which tiny liquid-crystal ”shutters” block or transmit white light through a red, green, or blue filter.) For passive pixels on a functional contact lens, the light source would be the environment. The colors wouldn’t be as precise as with a white-backlit LCD, but the images could be quite sharp and finely resolved.

We’ve mainly pursued the active approach and have produced lenses that can accommodate an 8-by-8 array of LEDs. For now, active pixels are easier to attach to lenses. But using passive pixels would significantly reduce the contact’s overall power needs—if we can figure out how to make the pixels smaller, higher in contrast, and capable of reacting quickly to external signals.

By now you’re probably wondering how a person wearing one of our contact lenses would be able to focus on an image generated on the surface of the eye. After all, a normal and healthy eye cannot focus on objects that are fewer than 10 centimeters from the corneal surface. The LEDs by themselves merely produce a fuzzy splotch of color in the wearer’s field of vision. Somehow the image must be pushed away from the cornea. One way to do that is to employ an array of even smaller lenses placed on the surface of the contact lens. Arrays of such microlenses have been used in the past to focus lasers and, in photolithography, to draw patterns of light on a photoresist. On a contact lens, each pixel or small group of pixels would be assigned to a microlens placed between the eye and the pixels. Spacing a pixel and a microlens 360 micrometers apart would be enough to push back the virtual image and let the eye focus on it easily. To the wearer, the image would seem to hang in space about half a meter away, depending on the microlens.

Another way to make sharp images is to use a scanning microlaser or an array of microlasers. Laser beams diverge much less than LED light does, so they would produce a sharper image. A kind of actuated mirror would scan the beams from a red, a green, and a blue laser to generate an image. The resolution of the image would be limited primarily by the narrowness of the beams, and the lasers would obviously have to be extremely small, which would be a substantial challenge. However, using lasers would ensure that the image is in focus at all times and eliminate the need for microlenses.

Whether we use LEDs or lasers for our display, the area available for optoelectronics on the surface of the contact is really small: roughly 1.2 millimeters in diameter. The display must also be semitransparent, so that wearers can still see their surroundings. Those are tough but not impossible requirements. The LED chips we’ve built so far are 300 µm in diameter, and the light-emitting zone on each chip is a 60-µm-wide ring with a radius of 112 µm. We’re trying to reduce that by an order of magnitude. Our goal is an array of 3600 10-µm-wide pixels spaced 10 µm apart.

One other difficulty in putting a display on the eye is keeping it from moving around relative to the pupil. Normal contact lenses that correct for astigmatism are weighted on the bottom to maintain a specific orientation, give or take a few degrees. I figure the same technique could keep a display from tilting (unless the wearer blinked too often!).

Like all mobile electronics, these lenses must be powered by suitable sources, but among the options, none are particularly attractive. The space constraints are acute. For example, batteries are hard to miniaturize to this extent, require recharging, and raise the specter of, say, lithium ions floating around in the eye after an accident. A better strategy is gathering inertial power from the environment, by converting ambient vibrations into energy or by receiving solar or RF power. Most inertial power scavenging designs have unacceptably low power output, so we have focused on powering our lenses with solar or RF energy.

Let’s assume that 1 square centimeter of lens area is dedicated to power generation, and let’s say we devote the space to solar cells. Almost 300 microwatts of incoming power would be available indoors, with potentially much more available outdoors. At a conversion efficiency of 10 percent, these figures would translate to 30 µW of available electrical power, if all the subsystems of the contact lens were run indoors.

Collecting RF energy from a source in the user’s pocket would improve the numbers slightly. In this setup, the lens area would hold antennas rather than photovoltaic cells. The antennas’ output would be limited by the field strengths permitted at various frequencies. In the microwave bands between 1.5 gigahertz and 100 GHz, the exposure level considered safe for humans is 1 milliwatt per square centimeter. For our prototypes, we have fabricated the first generation of antennas that can transmit in the 900-megahertz to 6-GHz range, and we’re working on higher-efficiency versions. So from that one square centimeter of lens real estate, we should be able to extract at least 100 µW, depending on the efficiency of the antenna and the conversion circuit.

Having made all these subsystems work, the final challenge is making them all fit on the same tiny polymer disc. Recall the pieces that we need to cram onto a lens: metal microstructures to form antennas; compound semiconductors to make optoelectronic devices; advanced complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor silicon circuits for low-power control and RF telecommunication; microelectromechanical system (MEMS) transducers and resonators to tune the frequencies of the RF communication; and surface sensors that are reactive with the biochemical environment.

The semiconductor fabrication processes we’d typically use to make most of these components won’t work because they are both thermally and chemically incompatible with the flexible polymer substrate of the contact lens. To get around this problem, we independently fabricate most of the microcomponents on silicon-on-insulator wafers, and we fabricate the LEDs and some of the biosensors on other substrates. Each part has metal interconnects and is etched into a unique shape. The end yield is a collection of powder-fine parts that we then embed in the lens.

We start by preparing the substrate that will hold the microcomponents, a 100-µm-thick slice of polyethylene terephthalate. The substrate has photolithographically defined metal interconnect lines and binding sites. These binding sites are tiny wells, about 10 µm deep, where electrical connections will be made between components and the template. At the bottom of each well is a minuscule pool of a low-melting-point alloy that will later join together two interconnects in what amounts to micrometer-scale soldering.

We then submerge the plastic lens substrate in a liquid medium and flow the collection of microcomponents over it. The binding sites are cut to match the geometries of the individual parts so that a triangular component finds a triangular well, a circular part falls into a circular well, and so on. When a piece falls into its complementary well, a small metal pad on the surface of the component comes in contact with the alloy at the bottom of the well, causing a capillary force that lodges the component in place. After all the parts have found their slots, we drop the temperature to solidify the alloy. This step locks in the mechanical and electrical contact between the components, the interconnects, and the substrate.

The next step is to ensure that all the potentially harmful components that we’ve just assembled are completely safe and comfortable to wear. The lenses we’ve been developing resemble existing gas-permeable contacts with small patches of a slightly less breathable material that wraps around the electronic components. We’ve been encapsulating the functional parts with poly(methyl methacrylate), the polymer used to make earlier generations of contact lenses. Then there’s the question of the interaction of heat and light with the eye. Not only must the system’s power consumption be very low for the sake of the energy budget, it must also avoid generating enough heat to damage the eye, so the temperature must remain below 45 °C. We have yet to investigate this concern fully, but our preliminary analyses suggest that heat shouldn’t be a big problem.

 

eye04
Photos: University of Washington

In Focus:

One lens prototype [left] has several interconnects, single-crystal silicon components, and compound-semiconductor components embedded within. Another sample lens [right] contains a radio chip, an antenna, and a red LED.

 

All the basic technologies needed to build functional contact lenses are in place. We’ve tested our first few prototypes on animals, proving that the platform can be safe. What we need to do now is show all the subsystems working together, shrink some of the components even more, and extend the RF power harvesting to higher efficiencies and to distances greater than the few centimeters we have now. We also need to build a companion device that would do all the necessary computing or image processing to truly prove that the system can form images on demand. We’re starting with a simple product, a contact lens with a single light source, and we aim to work up to more sophisticated lenses that can superimpose computer-generated high-resolution color graphics on a user’s real field of vision.

The true promise of this research is not just the actual system we end up making, whether it’s a display, a biosensor, or both. We already see a future in which the humble contact lens becomes a real platform, like the iPhone is today, with lots of developers contributing their ideas and inventions. As far as we’re concerned, the possibilities extend as far as the eye can see, and beyond.

The author would like to thank his past and present students and collaborators, especially Brian Otis, Desney Tan, and Tueng Shen, for their contributions to this research.

About the Author

Babak A. Parviz wakes up every morning and sticks a small piece of polymer in each eye. So it was only a matter of time before this bionanotechnology expert at the University of Washington, in Seattle, imagined contact lenses with built-in circuits and LEDs. “It’s really fun to hook things up and see how they might work,” he says. In “For Your Eye Only”, Parviz previews a contact lens for the 21st century.

To Probe Further

You can find details about the fabrication process using self-assembly in “Self-Assembled Single-Crystal Silicon Circuits on Plastic,” by Sean A. Stauth and Babak A. Parviz, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 19 September 2006.


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Comments will appear after moderation 

Ron 08.21.2010
Is it possible to have HMD display in a contact lens??
ellaine 08.11.2010
is it out on the market? how much would it cost?
xyro 07.24.2010
Well... Wouldn't it be disturbing too use this gadget? It would at least take a little time too get used too the concept of reading with the peripheral vision, don't you agree?
Asha 06.22.2010
I want to keep updated
mark chouchani 06.09.2010
i like its very cool and i congratulate ho made it he is verry intelligent and i which to have one of thees Lens.
mr green 06.09.2010
would like to know when these would be available to purchase
Scott Schlack 05.13.2010
Chemical-based color changing is old technology (http://www.psfk.com/2010/03/color-changing-contact-lenses-help-monitor-diabetes.html) How about a flashing LED or a display that reads "Hey Jeff, your blood sugar is 10 points too high or too low; take your meds within a half an hour."
Tim Blocher 05.12.2010
It seems that you should be able to conduct the power and video signals from the external computer through the human body and capacitively couple to the lens circuitry. This would eliminate the need for some of the in-lens RF and power components. As aloways, the devil is in the details.....
Paul James 04.25.2010
Hi folks, firstly. well done on a truly inspiring piece of work! I am a Keratoconus sufferer living in the UK. I work in IT, mostly on the law enforcement side and do less useful stuff like riding motorcycles for 6hrs a day to get to work etc. I currently use softperm lenses to correcy a moderate radially displaced distortion in my left cornea. You are probably aware that this lens is a composite with a rigid centre surrounded by a soft chewy outer. I used these to counter the problems of lid rejection with ordinary lnses. I note from your report the fact that lens temperatures should not be a problem, but how do you see (sic) the issue that many prospective lens wearers struggle with panning out with this technology? I would be very interested in contributing to this research in any way I can Best regards Paul James
Chris Noble 04.22.2010
The only thing your Forget is The operating system for the lenses Might i suggest Project natal a microsoft livelab project and there seadragon project aswell http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ra5tp7K--I if any one know of project natal imagine the software it uses and reverse enginering that for the praviz lenses
dave tribbett 04.04.2010
Great post, I referenced it in a post I just completed HERE. One of the most interesting things is the relationship between the Internet of Things and Augmented Reality, they seem to be bound by the same fundamental requirements in both technology and adoption. Thanks for the post.
David Kennely 04.01.2010
How much money would I need to pay you for you to make me one of these. I understand that it is not completely safe yet, but when the technologies are perfected I would be very interested in obtaining one.
a.mohamed azarudeen 03.17.2010
i think, maintanance will be very difficult
Contact lenses 03.11.2010
Wow! Sounds amazing. Can't wait to buy some, whenever that might happen...
abhijna ravi 03.04.2010
really a brilliant idea!!how abt d expenses,storage and correction in case of damage??
Zimminger 02.19.2010
I see a future with hope. No, wait. With a rope. And a tree branch to throw it over. Pardon my skepticism--the science is wonderful--but people can't handle eating in a car let alone talk on cell phones without hitting the cars in front of them. I know someone who drove his car into a ditch tuning the radio, and that was the old kind with only two knobs. As jet fighters got more complex, they thought the best thing would be to give the pilot all of that information. The result was akin to what you see when a computer stops functioning while it catches up. The pilots blacked out from information overload for several seconds. Eyes wide open, brain out to lunch. Well...if not in actual combat, they could afford to coast for a few miles. Imagine that on a highway, though. I hardly even use the radio in my car and then only very consciously because of all the tiny buttons on it. I know how it takes my attention off the road. So if you're thinking internet capability, I shudder. Not that the idea is entirely bad, mind you. I have to monitor potassium and phosphorus among other things every six weeks and it takes expensive blood tests. But I don't need a contact lens for that. Give me something to spit on once a day to tell me that information. I like the idea of glasses or goggles. All the problems seem to fall into place if you scale them up to glasses size. They could be brought to market in a year or so and do away with monitors altogether. But not to overlay the real world. That's as bad an idea as the LED transparent overlays on rear view mirrors. Just because you can do it doesn't mean that you should.
PaddyD 01.28.2010
What a load of cobblers! Oxygen and water permiability through any contact lens will kill any organic electronics. Making the lens imperiable will not allow the cornea to breath. And thats even before you talk about the optics of the system.....
Gudipudi 01.26.2010
My goodness, sky is the only limit for Augmented reality applications. I am damn sure that our next generations would become the most laziest due to these hifi technologies.
Joseph 01.20.2010
Excellent work, I await future publications by you and specifically on this project.
adam dickinson 01.18.2010
or this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ac6CXS47rmU
adam dickinson 01.18.2010
very exciting stuff. this technology will take place of all previous tech. from modern computers to the light bulb. the applications are endless and probably unimaginable from binoculars, night/infrared/thermal vision, and controling everything electronic. the processor i think should be seperate outside the contact for power purposes. the contact itself should just be a monitor. some things this inspires me to think of is dr. manhatton when hes building the time machine in watchmen 2:00 minutes in this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9_lGXNhWus&feature=PlayList&p=6052A5AF26D326A2&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=22#movie_player . engineers could use this to build a smarter world.
Alex 01.08.2010
I can't help but feel possitively disgusted by the animal testing used for this product. As if it's not bed enough they are used for testing in the first place, now they are testing things that aren't even for medical reasons. Grrrrr.... it just pisses me off. All people think about is themselves. Too preoccupied with their own species to give a damn about anything else. The world isnt going to last that long anyway. What with all the shit its been through. Sorry about this angry rant folks, but someones got to give a damn.
LTL 01.03.2010
I've already got one.
Dew 12.31.2009
You mean... I get to see like, *gasp* ...the Terminator!? Nerd heaven really does exist!
Trinity 12.29.2009
I think that these contact lenses would be an amazing revolution, and I would really like to get a pair. It would be wonderful.
Jo 12.16.2009
I hope these are oneday commercially available. I only have one eye, and it can only see 2metres, so it would be nice the lense had a zoom function. Then I'll be able to see enough to go out by myself!!!
Frank R.Smith 12.09.2009
I had a similar idea (a dime a dozen) almost two decades ago except it was to utilize Liquid Crystal tech to develope a auto/variable Focus contact lens.Powered by light or squinting to apply pressure and control to the lens. Infra-red beam to determine distances.
Carl Wilhelm Gustavsson 12.03.2009
Soon our kids could run around outdoors playing all their favourite games with their friends, same games but interacting with the environment in infinite ways, our kids will be superhealthy if this technology is developed enough :D
Dominik 12.01.2009
Where do I have to sign for the Beta-Test? ;-)
Rainer Spiegel 11.26.2009
If it is the case that glucose levels can soon be determined reliably through glucose detectors integrated in contact lenses, the much feared hypoglycemia in diabetics could be prevented. Moreover, an ambulance could be contacted automatically via the person's cell-phone (since it could be connected to the electronic contact lense and could automatically contact the ambulance after realizing (a) severe hypoglycemia and (b) unconsciousness through an absence of eye movements). If the patient is alone (e.g. in her/his flat), the patient could be found via GPS locating the cell phone . This may all sound a bit futuristic. On the other hand, technology to make this happen seems already there or just around the corner.
patrick stuart fuller 11.25.2009
How much of this technology could be built into glasses or goggles?
Ed Nelson 11.23.2009
Please disregard that last post. I thought I was emailing the article. Thank you, Ed Nelson
Kathyrn Hume 11.23.2009
Good Day Kathyrn, Upon rereading, I realize that my imagination made me want to believe that this technology was further along than it is. Still, it interesting. Take care, Ed Nelson
Michael 11.19.2009
*sighs* Whats wrong with using EyeGlasses? I mean if we have the technology to shrink everything down so it'll fit on a contact lense, albeit just barely, then a set of glasses with built in hud should be a cinch. I mean...it would be nice for those of us who'd prefer not to wet our eyes every 30 minutes. However...I'm very excited about this. If any of you have ever watched Dennou Coil then you know exactly what I'm on about. This could very well be the first steps of a grand integration revolution, where knowledge truly is just a glance away. Also....''''
Tasha 11.16.2009
That's great, but I can't wear contacts due to tight eyelids. I love 'em but can't get any time over two hours. Crummy. So until they put these beauties on the eye-equivalent of table legs as Vent-Air Contacts were in the 80s, people like me are doomed from wearing them. Which basically sucks.
Deyan R 11.13.2009
I had this very idea 2 years ago when i started my Electrical Engineering degree! Gah..it seems like all the good stuff is being invented while us young folk are still finishing our degrees.
Ela 11.11.2009
nice info abt future.........
Harrison Richardson 11.10.2009
Tapping the optic nerve would also be invasive. This seems like a much more marketable approach.
steven krug 11.10.2009
I'm a aircraft mechanic, the volume of instantaneuos, hands free data that would be available to me would make my job so much more profitable.
Kevin A. Parker 11.10.2009
Can this lens be used to restore sight?
sarvnaz 11.03.2009
hi . iam from iran . thanks mr Parviz . very good
Jeong 11.01.2009
Contact Lens
Anees Uddin 11.01.2009
This level of miniturization makes all the discussions concerning device preference rether primitive, assuming that this technology becomes commercially applicable and adapted for augmented reality services, what would be the key differentiating factors for competing device OEM's?
Ben Abba 10.05.2009
Very exciting, but isn't this a miniaturization of Microvision's direct retinal tech? As I recall, their work originated at UW' Human Interface Technology (HIT) lab.
Dominique Northeast 10.02.2009
Ultimately plugging in to the optic nerves and touch and smell receptors would be a much more elegant solution, however we simply do not know enough about the human nervous system and brain to make this a viable proposition at present, whilst the technology needed to harvest sensory input before they enter the body is already available all be it in rudamentary form.
Contact Lenses 10.02.2009
I can not wait to be able to buy these online like regular contact lenses. Would you need an Rx from an eye doc? either way it would be amazing.
Andy B 10.01.2009
Great technology.......But, would it not be a shorter route to solution to :- tap the optic nerve and the auditory nerve directly to provide perfect light and sound to the user. power could be provided by using the blood flow of a main vein to drive a generator
Scott Schlack 09.30.2009
The biomedical sensing/monitoring applications of this technology seem to be very marketable. For example, considering the number of individuals with diabetes induced vision problems, these lenses seem like an obvious prescription.
Dominique Northeast 09.30.2009
As technology gets smaller and smaller it is becoming more and more intimate with the way we interact with it. This device represents an important milestone on the way to producing embedded systems within the human body and has the potential to provide an inconspicuous way to augment the sense of sight. It is perhaps important to remember that there are also other senses that could be augmented in a similar fashion and which, once connected to each other could provide a whole range of enhanced sensory inputs. Many medical applications have been discussed here using embedded sensors to relay patient information back to health care professionals, but as well as this perhaps linking sensor arrays located either on or in the hands of a GP which would relay information about vital signs of a patient entering their surgery through a simple handshake. This data, once processed by a mobile microprocessor could then be relayed to the contact lens display. Similarly with senses such as the sense of smell, imagine being able to detect the smallest traces of a gas or toxic fume leak using embedded sensors relaying data to the display. two large hurdles with this type of technology (as has already been discussed) are power supply and size. The trick being to produce devices with minimal power consumption and also so unobtrusive as to be unoticable to the wearer.
Pio Borges 09.25.2009
Just alike to be in 1900 wondering what the next decade would offer. But today is still much better...
Mansoor Ahmed Zia 09.24.2009
Dream coming to reality will be the most perfect punchi line for this LENS. thanks to the science.
Luis Brauer 09.23.2009
Please keep me updated, Im interested on this topic, i would like try it.
Luis Brauer 09.23.2009
Please keep me updated, I'm interested on this topic, I would like try it.
David 09.23.2009
X-ray vision.....better start to wear lead clothes.
Jeanne Jones 09.20.2009
please keep me updated!
nicolekali 09.16.2009
where do I sign up? I already wear gas permeable lenses, I can handle these.
Steve Hickman 09.14.2009
This seems like a solution in search of a problem. Everything I read here can be done easier, with less risk, some other way. Heads up display can be done with glasses. Body fluid monitoring can be done a myriad of other ways. Bionic sight, which I've always thought meant better vision, isn't about electronics - at least the way it's described in this article. It's about better pixel resolution - which probably won't be addressed by inserting electronics in contact lenses. It seems to me that everyone got so caught up in the concept that nobody remembered to ask "Who cares?" or "Why does this matter?"
Maribel 09.13.2009
Will there be a contact lens that can have auto focus for a person that has presbyopia. Thank you Maribel lozano
Glenn O'Dell 09.10.2009
If you can install a million lasers with output beams 1 micron in diameter at a distance of 1"all parallel within 1 ppm, you could have a useful image. Leds would simply flood the Macula with diffuse light. Sounds as near to impossible as you can get.
David 09.10.2009
If you liked it, then read about these cool augmented reality see-through glasses: http://www.vuzix.com/iwear/products_wrap920av.html This gives a more complete picture about the idea of augmented reality devices: http://gamesalfresco.com/2008/04/16/10-best-augmented-reality-devices-that-will-reinvent-mobile-video-games/
Eric Berman 09.10.2009
My wife suffers from declining vision on account of a bunching of the vitreous humor directly between the lens and the retina. There are so many "floaters" moving about in her eyes that she has trouble driving on the highway where distant cars are indistinguishable from moving "floaters." As a result, she does not drive often. And as for reading or using the computer, she explains her odd posture as "looking around the floaters." Experts, even up the Wilmer Clinic at Johns Hopkins or Dr, Charles in Memphis can do nothing and recommend against a vitrectomy Why can't you direct the sensors on your contact lenses inward and using some sort of active system, sense the location of the floaters and micro-adjust the refraction of the lens to optically dodge around them so that you give her the path of least obstruction?
michael 09.10.2009
Was I the only one who thought "iPhone" was almost too subtle to be a pun? Also, chill out folks -- some of these comments address problems that might exist if the product is mass marketed, but the author mentions that things are still in development. Don't worry until they get closer.
Michael 09.10.2009
This seems awfully promising. I am surprised at two things though -- first, that some comments address problems that do not exist, since this is not really a mass-produced or mass-worn object yet, and second, that no one else thought the iPhone comparison was perhaps a subtle pun.
Oliver 09.10.2009
I love the functional possibilities of such devices. One comment on powering the system. There are enough people already worried about unintentional irradiation from e.g. cellphones (regardless of the actual risk) that careful thought should be given to the energy harvesting mechanism. Photovoltaics would be best from that point of view but rf harvesting would also be acceptable if it relied on incidental environmental fields and not on a dedicated rf source.
Steve 09.08.2009
This is amazing! I can imagine (many years from now) something like this becoming mainstream for gaming. How fun would it be to wear something like this for a game of enhanced capture the flag/ capture and defend. Then the skills of your character (you) would largely depend on your own skills and abilities. You could move and interact within the real world with the added fun of graphics overlaid and instant updates about the game much like current 1st person shooter games (you'd end up with healthier gamers). The military training/ use applications would make for a ultra-elite fighting force. Contacts with night vision would be awesome. The ability to look at a person or object and have it tell you what it is, its capabilities, and reference a user manual if needed. See if a person is wanted for questioning/ suspected terrorist...mmm well that's sounding a bit police-state like, but just like any tool the user must decide how to use it and act off of the information. Anyway I wonder if any of the shortcomings from the limited real estate could be overcome by the contact lens working in concert with a pair of glasses. Good Luck, very cool stuff!
Wayne 09.06.2009
This technology is just one piece of a larger puzzle. The ability to overlay imagery over one's vision provides for many interesting and useful applications. Now combine that with information tags in the real world and now we can see the world in an entirely new way. It could be like having a built in information search engine running and feeding you info as you interact with the real world. As others have said, I also feel that it would be more practical to apply this idea to glasses or other forms of vision accessories. It would be more accepted by a larger group of users then contacts and also means that there are many more option for power sources and information transfer to the display.
Bob Downs 09.06.2009
WOW! I am hard of hearing and use Closed Captioning on my home TV. After years of using it, I often wish I could get Closed Captioning in movie theaters and even in face-to-face conversations. It's so embarrassing and annoying not being able to hear what someone who's right in my face is saying to me. The glasses application would be more welcome to me than the contacts (I tried contacts once and had trouble with... I forget exactly - sensitive eyelids?). Either way, though, the technology sounds amazing and the glucose monitoring system, RF electricity transfer, and so forth is some real next level stuff! Congrats to the team who's been able to come even this far.
Daniel 09.05.2009
@ Rob Dupuis I'm no scientist, but i think it may be a bit different when it's right up to your eyes. Like they focus themselves or something. I've heard of people putting on those glasses with screens in both lenses, and they said they could watch movies so clearly, without trouble. Like you, i can't see or read anything closer than about 5 cm away, but i think it would work a bit different when it's right in your eye
Daniel 09.05.2009
Hahahaha and maybe you could have a rear view mirror in the HUD so you can actually have eyes in the back of your head! HAHAHAHAHAAHA I reckon the uses of this technology are endless. Like mentioned in the article... imagine looking at someone and selecting "subtitles: ON" or maybe having an instructional video highlighting objects you are holding and how to use them in say, a car. Or maybe even highlighting other cars while driving, and could give you speed stats, etc. There could be stats on almost anything with these - just look at the object. It could be a building. Or maybe for fun, you can change the colour of the sky. Seriously, you couldn't stop thinking of ideas for this tech. Brilliant
Carole Reid 09.05.2009
This is insanity. Completely overlooking the health effects.
Suki Fuller 09.04.2009
Excellent article and great work. I look forward to seeing where and how this progresses. As a person who has Keratoconus (rare & late case development of the disorder also, being in my 30s while the average patient develops in teen years) - do you think your contact lenses work could progress into an area aiding people with dystrophy of the cornea etc?
Paul Joseph, Luiso 09.04.2009
Freakin' amazing!!!
John Brauer 09.04.2009
Many of us wear glasses. Bionic capabilities should be much easier to apply to glasses than contact lenses. Comments from BEN and GREANY mention glasses. Are any bionic glasses now available?
sax0nNZ 09.04.2009
OMG I have been dreaming about this since forever! I want one!
Babak Parviz 09.03.2009
sorry guys, we cannot take in test volunteers now :)
Babak Parviz 09.03.2009
Mike, Ben, good points about measuring glucose. Most of the techniques we are considering now, require contact with the eye surface. One very big advantage that you get compared with most other techniques is that you can 'almost' measure the concentration at all times.
Rich Donnelly 09.03.2009
An article by the author appears on SPIE Newsroom website at http://spie.org/x35114.xml
Rob Dupuis 09.03.2009
Sounds awesome, right out of movies and science fiction and I can't wait to see this in production. BUT, how would the eye focus on something so close? My eyes have a hard time focusing on anything closer than 3-4 inches away.
Mike Schoenfeld 09.03.2009
What mechanism is being used to measure glucose concentration? A decade ago I worked with blue laser light shining into the eye to measure the relative concentrations of certain glucoated molecules, which could then be compared to average population values based on age, but at best that was a screening tool. When you say you can measure glucose concentrations without pricking a finger are you talking about accuracies equivalent to current glucometers? If so, then why isn't this technology a mainstream replacement for glucometers, irrespective of contact lenses? And what technology can be put into a contact lens that can measure glucose levels; I'm assuming you are not using blue laser light. This is not the main thrust of your article. Augmented contact lenses have much practical use outside of glucose measurement. There is so much misinformation about glucose measurment in the media today: non-coding meters are only more accurate if people forget to replace their code keys with a new vial of strips, and then only maybe; not having to prick fingers usually means alternate site testing such as pricking the hand or forearm, and these areas are not as accurate as the fingertip, and are more sensitive to outside influences. So, is your glucose mechanism a replacement for modern glucometers, or an "idiot-light" like warning mechanism? The later is still very useful, but let's be clear what we're talking about here. Also, what about the clarity of the other medical tests that are mentioned?
ColbyJM 09.03.2009
sounds amazing! this is the kind of stuff that makes me look to the future with hope; who knows what kind of doors this may open? And as mundane and simple as this will sound compared to all the great possibilities it could have curing blindness or vision impaired, i think it would look just plain amazing to see a glowing red or blue LED in the middle of ones pupil. Quite a party trick ;]
Jeremy C 09.03.2009
This technology will bring up some interesting issues at work. You could tune anyone out at meetings or while you're supposed to be working at your desk. Or relationships for that matter... Yes honey, uh huh.
Eric Laspe 09.03.2009
Where do I sign up to be a beta-tester?
John Davis 09.03.2009
Wow, no way dude that is just WAY too cool! RT www.anonymous-web.be.tc
Greaney 09.03.2009
Testing contact lenses on rabbits so we can enhance games and go on the internet more? I'll stick to framed glasses (@BEN), or maybe just enjoy the (real) view
Felipe 09.03.2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGFG3PNw2WE A little visualization from an architect point of view
Adrien 09.03.2009
Where do I sign up to help beta test this stuff? Heh.
Henry Brown 09.02.2009
Could a contact lens be integrated with a biochip to diagnose disease? Users could remove at the end of a day and place on cell phone microscope for remote diagnostics. Disease Diagnostic chip: http://www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu/news/Lipkin_GreeneChip.html A new cell phone microscope may allow remote diagnostics of rural patients. How do we create a microarray robust enough to work in the field? Build it into a contact lens? Could Greene/Pathogen chip be adapted to contact lens/ cell phone microscope? http://www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu/news/Lipkin_GreeneChip.html Aydogan Ozcan of UCLA built cell phone microscope. http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/02/03/medical.imaging.device/index.html A Global Health Profiler (GHP) cell phone can be simulated. A cell phone microscope is simulated reading microarrays to diagnose patients. GHP Cartoon in MIT SCRATCH: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/GeneMachine/389166 Could U of Wash. work with Dr. Srinivas at IIIT (srinivas@iiit.net ) in India to implement Global Health Profiler (GHP)? IIIT is using cell phone telemedicine in India. Microsoft is developing a cell phone for telemedicine with IIIT in India. http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/collaboration/papers/hyperbad.pdf England already uses simulations to train doctors. http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/03/30/doctors.second.life/ Immune Attack simulation teaches kids about immune systems. http://fas.org/immuneattack/ Could UW and IIIT build a virtual health simulation for students? Similar to the Second Life Hospital used in England? How to use cell phone and contact lens to diag disease? http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/03/30/doctors.second.life/ Could UW develop a contact lens/microarray that can be read by a cell phone microscope in rural areas? Could UW develop a cell phone that reads disease contact lens/microarrays? Diagnose disease fast and cheaply in the field. Could UW build software for cell phone microscope to transmit encrypted microarray analysis? CELL PHONE Microscope - Image analysis Could this cell phone microscope be adapted to genomic chips for field sampling? Cell phone adapted for blood analysis: http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/multimedia/2008/12/gallery_microscope_phone http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08%2F12%2F20%2F2012230&from=rss Could Cell Profiler be adapted to Cell Phone technology? http://www.cellprofiler.org/ MATLAB is now being used in Cell Profiler to process images. http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/9386 http://amath.colorado.edu/courses/4720/2000Spr/Labs/Worksheets/Matlab_tutorial/matlabimpr.html http://www.amazon.com/Image-Processing-MATLAB-Applications-Medicine/dp/0849392462 http://www.amazon.com/DNA-Array-Image-Analysis-Bolts/dp/0966402758/ref=si3_rdr_bb_product (Intro. chap. FREE) Microarray analysis using cell profiler? Cancer microarray.http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2407/6/250 MYCIN can be used for automated DNA diagnostics. Could UW build a student version? MYCIN blood analysis expert system allows doctors to diagnose disease cooperatively. MYCIN was the combination of thousands of doctor's diagnosis. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycin This cell phone blood analysis tool should be connected to a MYCIN expert system. My thesis used a MYCIN like AI to reassemble genomes. Eventually a second step would be to use microarrays to analyze the DNA and proteins in the sample. How would microarrays be analyzed via cell phone? A cute SciFi book "Galapagos" by Kurt Vonnegut describes an AI like this. A Dwave Quantum supercomputer could use Grover's Algorithm to analyze all past blood samples to make a match. The phone based health care system could then be used world wide to diagnose disease. Costs for health care would drop quickly as diagnosis became cheap. We also used genetic algorithms to reassemble contigs. The MYCIN model was used to allow scientists to collaborate on rule sets for DNA assembly. New Genome Analysis tools will revolutionize Medicine. http://www.pacificbiosciences.com/index.php (view 4 min SMRT Tech video) $100 genomes Add a quantum computer http://www.dwavesys.com/index.php?page=bioinformatics and Grover's algorithm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grover's_algorithm and we could diagnose disease using the gene universe. Huntingtons disease proteins discovered with comparative genomics.http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=protein-interaction-huntingtons-disease http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1088934 Could microarray and genome databases be searched exhaustively using Grover's Algorithm on Dwave systems? Could a global health care network use contact lens/cell phone microarrays for automated blood diagnostics?
Jörgen Dahlberg 09.02.2009
This technology has the ability to truly make the web ubiquitous. And that would transform us all from stationary to mobile informationprocessing units.
sam 09.02.2009
Great technology, sounds promising.. wish the professor and students all the luck!
sam 09.02.2009
Great technology, sounds very promising and wish you all the best of luck.
Paulo Valadares 09.01.2009
PT-BR: Cara..isso é surreal...Parabéns!! EN-EN: This is surreal...congratulations!!
Ben 09.01.2009
what would you say, other than monitoring glucose levels and such, would be the advantage in making this a contact lens instead of something more akin to framed glasses? Does the technology require being in contact with the eye to attain its greatest effectiveness? also, with internet capability and information exchange with external computers what would the chances be that such a system (or its most certainly susceptible older brother the PC which would most likely be relaying the information) could have its security compromised and cause problems with the system itself?
autonomouse 09.01.2009
Great. Can't wait. Now all you need to do it to fit the camera on the front to bluetooth a photo to your phone* after every blink, say, then you'll have a comprehensive record of your life. Maybe a triple blink can start video recording? Shouldn't take you too long, I'll check back next week... :-) * Android please, not iphone :-P
Paul Datta 09.01.2009
I can't wait or this to become mainstream - endless possibilities especially in the field of education. I hope it doesn't go the military way first.
Charles Holbrook 09.01.2009
Wow, I would be more than willing to risk losing eyesight in one of my eyes to test this out as the technology matures.
Thom Stevens 09.01.2009
Human being's incessent desire to combine/improve things never ceases to amaze me. Sean and Babak might certainly benefit from the OLED work going on at Riken, see: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/08/31/oled_technique/