Vision scientists create and successfully test technique to enhance digital television viewing for visually impaired
Scientists at Schepens Eye Research Institute have found that people
with low vision can improve their ability to see and enjoy television
with a new technique that allows them to enhance the contrast of
images of people and objects of interest on their digital televisions.
A study in the edition of the Journal of the Optical Society of America
published online in November 2007 and issued in print in January 2008,
demonstrates that patients with macular degeneration prefer watching TV
with this contrast enhancement and that the level of enhancement they
choose depends on how much vision they have lost with their disease.
Nearly four million Americans suffer from vision loss from
diseases--such as macular degeneration--that impede their central
vision and their ability to comfortably view the images on any
television, cutting them off from a significant source of information
and entertainment enjoyed by the mainstream. Often such patients cannot
see faces of characters or other details that make a broadcast
understandable. Some solutions have been special telescopic glasses,
which can help patients see details but often cut off parts of the
image, lessening context, and large television screens, which can be
quite costly.
The new method--developed by Dr. Eli Peli
, the Institute’s low vision expert, the Moakley Scholar in Aging Eye
Research, and a professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School,
is the latest of several image-enhancing innovations his research team
has created to improve TV watching for the visually impaired. It is
also the first developed for digital television images. “We knew it was
time to address the changing technology,” says Peli, who pointed out
that digital television will replace traditional television technology
over the next few years due to government mandate.
Working within the “decoder” that makes digital television images
possible, Peli and his colleagues were able to make a simple change
that could give every digital TV the contrast enhancing potential for
the benefit of the visually impaired. “The same modification could
easily be made to new HDTVs, and digital cable set top boxes,” says Matthew Fullerton,
the paper’s first author, and a student of electronic engineering from
the University of York in England who is currently working on his
Master’s degree in Peli’s lab.
To test their new technology, the team presented eight digital
videos to 24 subjects with vision impairment and six with normal
vision. Each patient was given a remote control, which allowed him/her
to increase or decrease the contrast of the image. Patients manipulated
over-enhanced and blurry images for the greatest clarity.
The research team learned that even subjects with normal sight
selected some enhancement and that the amount of enhancement selected
by those with visual problems varied depending upon the level of
contrast sensitivity loss they experienced due to their disease. All
this demonstrated to the team that the device was both usable and
useful to the subjects, even those without vision problems.
Peli is now working with Analog Devices Inc. to create a prototype
chip that could be included in all future generations of digital
television. “The technology we created is quite simple and can easily
and cheaply be incorporated into even the newest technologies for
television and internet video.”
Peli adds that he believes that as the population ages, this
technology will be used by more and more of those whose eyes are going
through a normal change as they get older as well as those more
severely impaired.
Please click here to see examples of how images are enhanced
Other members of the research team include Russell L. Woods, and Fuensanta A. Vera-Diaz of Schepens Eye Research Institute.