June 24, 2010
New Device Uses Mobile Phone To Test Vision In Developing Countries

A team of researchers at MIT's Media Lab has created a simple and inexpensive device that when used with a mobile phone can help diagnose vision problems. Gearlog reports.
The test takes less than two minutes, during which the patient is asked to look through a small device attached to the screen of a mobile phone. The device uses small lenses and pinholes that require the user to focus at different depths.
If any vision problems are discovered while looking at the test patterns, the user adjusts the display until it can be seen clearly. This quickly provides exact measurements, potentially more accurate than the current system, which requires patients to decide which of two separate, serially viewed options is better.
... The NETRA system recently won a prize in te MIT IDEAS competition, and the prototype and supporting research papers will be presented at this summer's SIGGRAPH computer graphics conference.
Read full article.
emily | 10:50 AM |
Mobile phone projects - Developing World, Technology
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