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      Photodiode Circuits for Retinal Prostheses

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          Abstract

          Photodiode circuits show promise for the development of high-resolution retinal prostheses. While several of these systems have been constructed and some even implanted in humans, existing descriptions of the complex optoelectronic interaction between light, photodiode, and the electrode/electrolyte load are limited. This study examines this interaction in depth with theoretical calculations and experimental measurements. Actively biased photoconductive and passive photovoltaic circuits are investigated, with the photovoltaic circuits consisting of one or more diodes connected in series, and the photoconductive circuits consisting of a single diode in series with a pulsed bias voltage. Circuit behavior and charge injection levels were markedly different for platinum and sputtered iridium–oxide film (SIROF) electrodes. Photovoltaic circuits were able to deliver 0.038 mC/cm 2 (0.75 nC/phase) per photodiode with 50- μ m platinum electrodes, and 0.54-mC/cm 2 (11 nC/phase) per photodiode with 50- μ m SIROF electrodes driven with 0.5-ms pulses of light at 25 Hz. The same pulses applied to photoconductive circuits with the same electrodes were able to deliver charge injections as high as 0.38 and 7.6 mC/cm 2 (7.5 and 150 nC/phase), respectively. We demonstrate photovoltaic stimulation of rabbit retina in-vitro, with 0.5-ms pulses of 905-nm light using peak irradiance of 1 mW/mm 2 . Based on the experimental data, we derive electrochemical and optical safety limits for pixel density and charge injection in various circuits. While photoconductive circuits offer smaller pixels, photovoltaic systems do not require an external bias voltage. Both classes of circuits show promise for the development of high-resolution optoelectronic retinal prostheses.

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          Sinc approximation of algebraically decaying functions

          An extension of sinc interpolation on \(\mathbb{R}\) to the class of algebraically decaying functions is developed in the paper. Similarly to the classical sinc interpolation we establish two types of error estimates. First covers a wider class of functions with the algebraic order of decay on \(\mathbb{R}\). The second type of error estimates governs the case when the order of function's decay can be estimated everywhere in the horizontal strip of complex plane around \(\mathbb{R}\). The numerical examples are provided.
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            Subretinal electronic chips allow blind patients to read letters and combine them to words

            A light-sensitive, externally powered microchip was surgically implanted subretinally near the macular region of volunteers blind from hereditary retinal dystrophy. The implant contains an array of 1500 active microphotodiodes (‘chip’), each with its own amplifier and local stimulation electrode. At the implant's tip, another array of 16 wire-connected electrodes allows light-independent direct stimulation and testing of the neuron–electrode interface. Visual scenes are projected naturally through the eye's lens onto the chip under the transparent retina. The chip generates a corresponding pattern of 38 × 40 pixels, each releasing light-intensity-dependent electric stimulation pulses. Subsequently, three previously blind persons could locate bright objects on a dark table, two of whom could discern grating patterns. One of these patients was able to correctly describe and name objects like a fork or knife on a table, geometric patterns, different kinds of fruit and discern shades of grey with only 15 per cent contrast. Without a training period, the regained visual functions enabled him to localize and approach persons in a room freely and to read large letters as complete words after several years of blindness. These results demonstrate for the first time that subretinal micro-electrode arrays with 1500 photodiodes can create detailed meaningful visual perception in previously blind individuals.
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              Maximum permissible exposures for ocular safety (ANSI 2000), with emphasis on ophthalmic devices

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems
                IEEE Trans. Biomed. Circuits Syst.
                Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
                1932-4545
                1940-9990
                October 2011
                October 2011
                : 5
                : 5
                : 468-480
                Article
                10.1109/TBCAS.2011.2144980
                7453407
                23852178
                852fa242-f5f3-4236-8c39-8bbf73dcb369
                © 2011
                History

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