Published June 14, 2023
| Version v1
Publication
Implications of Neural Plasticity in Retinal Prosthesis.
Description
Retinal degenerative diseases such as retinitis pigmentosa cause a progressive loss of
photoreceptors that eventually prevents the affected person from perceiving visual sensations. The absence of a visual input produces a neural rewiring cascade that propagates
along the visual system. This remodeling occurs first within the retina. Then, subsequent
neuroplastic changes take place at higher visual centers in the brain, produced by either
the abnormal neural encoding of the visual inputs delivered by the diseased retina or
as the result of an adaptation to visual deprivation. While retinal implants can activate
the surviving retinal neurons by delivering electric current, the unselective activation
patterns of the different neural populations that exist in the retinal layers differ substantially from those in physiologic vision. Therefore, artificially induced neural patterns are
being delivered to a brain that has already undergone important neural reconnections.
Whether or not the modulation of this neural rewiring can improve the performance
for retinal prostheses remains a critical question whose answer may be the enabler of
improved functional artificial vision and more personalized neurorehabilitation strategies.
Abstract
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación y Agencia Estatal de Investigación, de España y fondos FEDER (MICIN/ AEI) RTI2018-094465-J-I00Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/147206
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/147206
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE