Vision Researcher Advances Work with $11.8 Million NIH Grant

Device for the Sight Impaired Slated for Initial Implantation and Analysis

Date

Author

By Marcia Faye
Vision Researcher Advances Work with $11.8 Million NIH Grant

Philip Troyk, associate dean of Armour College of Engineering, professor of biomedical engineering, and professor at Stuart School of Business, can also rightly be called the Since the 1990s Troyk has been working to restore vision to sight-impaired individuals. In 2017 the National Institutes of Health awarded Illinois Tech and six partner institutions, including the University of 电车无码 and Johns Hopkins University, for an early feasibility clinical trial of a visual device that bypasses the retina and optic nerves, instead connecting directly to the visual cortex of the brain. Troyk is principal investigator of the project, which will feature five human volunteers into whom the system will be surgically implanted. The outcome of the trial will be the evaluation of the first intra-cortical visual prosthesis system using novel implantable wireless stimulators.