NETRA – Cheap Device that enables checking of eyes using a smartphone!

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[Following is a live blog of the talk given by Dr. Ramesh Raskar, of MIT Media Lab in Pune on 6th July. The post has re-published here from Punetech.com]

Imagine, if you can use your Smartphone to get your eyes tested within less than 30 seconds. That’s exactly the innovation created by researchers (led by Dr. Ramesh Raskar) at MIT Labs.

EyeNetra is a very small, cheap device (that costs less than Rs. 100) that can be clipped on to a regular smartphone and which can be used to detect vision problems including detecting their lens prescription, astigmatism, and even cataract. Since it is so cheap, and portable, it can be used in villages all over the world.

Eye Netra

In India alone, about 6% of the people wear glasses, but it is estimated that about 40% of them should be wearing them. That’s 200 million people in India who don’t have eye glasses that are needed.

Why is this a big deal? Blurry vision means that a child cannot learn. Blurry vision means that there are certain jobs that a day labourer cannot do. So EyeNetra can have tremendous social impact.

Contents

EyeNetra Software

In EyeNetra, the software on the smartphone displays a number of dots on the screen. The clip on device has a number of tiny lenses which are placed in such a way that if you have normal vision, the light rays from all the dots will actually convert on the retina of your eye and you’ll see a single dot. If your eye has a problem, then you’ll see multiple dots. Now the UI of the software asks the user to adjust things until the dots converge and the user sees only one dot. Based on what adjustments are needed, the software will be able to figure out what are the defects in the user’s eye (in terms of spherical and cylindrical corrections)

EyeNetra needs high resolution displays, but in recent years the resolutions of phones have really gone up, from 160DPI for samsung to 300+ for the iPhone 4G. User demand is driving industry to improve the resolutions of their phone. So, every time you use your phone to see video clips and take photographs, you are forcing the industry to increase their resolutions, and will indirectly end up helping people around the world get better vision through EyeNetra.

Netra prototypes are now in dozen+ countries.

EyeMotia

The next device in this series is EyeMotia – for detecting cataracts. It is a similar clip-on device for a smartphone which uses similar techniques to determine whether you have cataract. The basic idea is similar – the software draws various patterns on the screen which pass through a specific area of the lens in your eye before reaching the retina to form a clear green dot. If you have normal vision, you will see a simple green dot going around in circles. If you have astigmatism, you will see the green dot going around in an oval path. If you have cataract, the green dot will disappear at certain times as it goes round. This is because at a certain location, when it has to pass through a cataract affected portion of your lens, the rays will get scattered and will not form a nice green dot on the retina.

What else?

The eye is the only part of your body where you can see blood vessels directly without having to cut you up. Similarly, if you know what to look for, you can look into the aqueous humour (the colorless liquid in the eye), you can make deductions about the blood sugar levels in your body. So, the eye is an amazing device, and you can use clever visual computing to do various interesting deductions about your body using simple devices and smartphones.

EyeNetra is setting up a team in India which will work with hospitals, government organizations, NGOs and other groups to take the EyeNetra device to rural India.

Challenge to People

A smart phone is an amazing device. There is lots and lots you could do with it. Think of various ways in which you can use it for purposes that it was not originally intended for. There is the camera, the display, accelerometer, GPS, internet, Bluetooth, RF. You can do magic!

Think of this example of thinking out of the box: create a video game in which people with normal vision will shoot one way, and people with abnormal vision (astimatism, color-blindness) will shoot a different way. So you get a medical test done while playing a video game.

For more information about EyeNetra, see http://EyeNetra.com

Why Visual Computation Will be Big

  • In the next few decades, the world will move from text and audio based communications to more and more visual information. Vision crosses language barriers, socio-economic barriers, and will help the next billion consumers. Hence, processing visual information intelligently becomes a very important capability.
  • In 6 years, the world went from zero cameras in mobile phones, to a billion cameras in mobile phones. And today, a billion mobile phones with cameras get sold every year. There is a major visual revolution underway, but most people haven’t realized it yet.
  • Hence, the Camera Culture group spends their time exploring various ideas related to visual computing. They spend 60% of their time on hardware and 40% on software. With this, they build crazy cameras – like the camera that can look around corners.
  • Looking around corners: How is this done? Use the flash from a camera. The light hits a wall / door / obstacle and bounces off in various directions. Some of the bounced photons actually go around the corner, hit various objects that are not directly visible, and then an even smaller fraction of them bounce back all the way to the camera. If you’re clever about analyzing the photons, you can actually figure out where each photon has come from and hence reconstruct features of the objects around the camera. For this you need to do an extremely fast camera – which does one trillion frames per second.
13 Comments
  1. DR VIJAY H.DHARWADKAR says

    I HAVE GONE THROUGH THE NEWS AND REALLY IMPRESSED BY THE FUNCTION OF THE DEVICE -NETRA. IT IS A GREAT INVENTION AND WILL DEFINITELY HELP THE EYE HEALTH WORKERS WORKING IN RURAL INDIA.PLEASE INFORM ME ABOUT THE DEALERS OF THE DEVICE IN PUNE AND MUMBAI.

  2. Shobana Sivanesan says

    good innovation

  3. Jasvinder Singh Chilana says

    Seems very interesting Waiting 4 it to come to India.

  4. Vivek Ganpule says

    IMPORTANT

  5. Meghan P. Patankar says

    Just listened to an excellent talk by Dr. Raskar.. more later and on http://raskar.info.

  6. Navin Kabra says

    Dear @Facility,
    I’ve asked Ramesh to provide a ‘straight-from-the-horse’s-mouth’ answer to this question, but in the meantime, here is my understanding:

    1. There are no side-effects to this gadget. This gadget is simply a smartphone screen and lenses. Nothing else. So this is no more dangerous than looking at a MMS clip on your mobile.
    2. Right now this gadget will only tell you your “number”. i.e. whether you need corrective eyeglasses and what the power is (spherical/cylindrical etc). The Motia/Catra device will be able to tell you about cataract too. For these two specific things, I believe the device(s) will be as accurate as going to an eye-specialist. But that’s it. The device does not check for other eye problems that a real doctor would check for. So, I still don’t think the device can replace an eye-specialist.
    3. However, “is this device as good as an eye-specialist” is the wrong question to ask. The correct question is: “if I am in a village and there is no eye-specialist within 50km, should I use this device to get my eyes checked?” – and then you will realize that the answer is absolutely yes. This device is not intended for personal use by people in cities – they’re better off going to a doctor on a regular basis. Its primary purpose is to allow eye checkups to reach areas where doctors cannot.

  7. Mahesh Agarwal says

    Excellent

  8. Facility Management in India says

    Amazing!!!!! I must call technology is helping human race here. Now why should one stand in a long queue or pay heavy bills of eye-specialist for an eye check-up. All I need to know if there is any side effect also. If it is safe to use this gadget for a regular eye check-up? Also if it is accurate enough that people avoid going to eye-specialist for a general chec-ups.

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