The contact lens of tomorow.....today!

In the real world
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The contact lens of tomorow.....today!

Post by Sionnach Glic »

People don't think twice about wearing a Bluetooth headset to have conversations on their cell phones. Well, one day it might not be unusual to wear a contact lens that projects the phone's display directly onto the eye. Researchers at the University of Washington have taken an important first step toward building contact lenses that could do just that. By incorporating metal circuitry and light-emitting diodes (LEDs) into a polymer-based lens, they have created a functional circuit that is biologically compatible with the eye.

"If you look at the structure of a lens, it's just a simple polymer," says Babak Parviz, professor of electrical engineering at the University of Washington. A number of researchers are putting electronics into polymers to build flexible circuits or displays, for instance. "What we realized was, we can make a lot of functional devices that are really tiny, and they can be incorporated into a contact lens to do a lot more than just improve vision," Parviz says.

The team created the electronic lens with two main purposes in mind, he says. One of the goals was to see if it would be possible to build a heads-up display that could superimpose images onto a person's field of view, while still allowing her to see the real world. It would be a sort of augmented reality, explains Parviz. (See "TR10: Augmented Reality.") Soldiers could use the technology to see information about their environment, collected from sensors. Or civilians could use the electronic lens as a cell-phone display, to see who is calling and to watch videos during a commute, although these goals are long term, he says.

Another possible application is to use the lens as a sensor that could monitor chemical levels in the body and notify the user if they indicate signs of disease. Although Parviz won't go into details about the specific sensors that his team is making, he explains that many indicators of health can be monitored from the surface of the eye. The live cells on the eye, he says, are in indirect contact with blood serum, which contains biomarkers for diseases. If a sensor designed to pick up these biomarkers was built into a lens, then doctors could have a completely new, noninvasive tool for disease tests. In addition, the lens could continually monitor changes over time, providing a more complete view of a person's health.

Admittedly, these applications are years away. But Parviz and his team have laid the foundation for the work. In a paper presented at the International Conference of Micro Electric Mechanical Systems in Tucson, AZ, last week, the researchers describe how they created a lens with 16 working LEDs. The lens was made from a polyethylene tetraphthalate substrate--the kind of plastic used in beverage bottles--which was covered with metal wires for connecting the LEDs.
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This is incredibly cool. How great will it be when you can do all sorts of stuff with this thing? :D
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Post by Captain Seafort »

The military applications, either as HUDs or as replacements for vision slits, etc, are obvious. The idea of people wearing these things while they're driving, on the other hand, is scary. Most of the idiots on the road can barely drive with two eyes on the road - change that to one eye on the road and one eye watching a video and it doesn't take an Einstein to predict trouble.
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Post by Reliant121 »

Cool. A Heads up Display.
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Post by Sionnach Glic »

Good point, Seafort. I see driving accidents going up for a while until the government puts strict laws on using these things while driving.
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Post by shran »

Reliant121 wrote:Cool. A Heads up Display.
Nah, just scouters integrated int the eye, acting as a VISOR as well.
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Post by Reliant121 »

close enough :lol:
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Post by Mikey »

I've driven cars with HUD's before, and it's not as distracting as you might think.

I'll never be able to wear one of these things, though, so you guys will have to tell me all about it.
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Post by mwhittington »

Wow, I'm probably not the only one to think of this application, but it would be awesome as an augment to a telescopic sight on a rifle or a monocular, to zoom in on your target. Just put a powerful superhigh resolution camera in place of your standard scope (we'l probably have really good ones by then), sight it in, and you've got much improved accuracy. It would be sensational on a CQ rifle because now you also have the ability to see around corners, fit it with a night vision camera and you now own the night. As we Northern Californians (NorCals) say," Hella cool!"
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Post by Mikey »

Well, the optics tech is already here. The Israelis have already created a periscope-type mechanism that actually uses camera feeds in order to see around corners - IIRC, it's part of their most recent bullpup assault rifle, esp. intended for urban warfare.
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Post by Sionnach Glic »

I was watching a program that talked about the 'Cornershot' weapon, this morning. Quite cool. :)
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Post by mwhittington »

Yeah, I saw that on Futureweapons on the Discovery Channel, very cool, indeed. You can put anything from a handgun to a grenade launcher in the Cornershot, use the camera mounted on top for looking around corners, and boom, the enemy is neutralized. But you can take that to the next level with those lenses. Instead of using a screen mounted on the weapon, you can link the camera to your lenses, and stay even further away from the corner.
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Post by Mikey »

Doesn't the "future-soldier" plan already include an HUD?
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Post by Sionnach Glic »

Wasn't that program scrapped, though?
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Post by Tsukiyumi »

Last I heard, it had been cancelled, yes.
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Post by Sionnach Glic »

Aw. Why is all the cool stuff scrapped? :(
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