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Scientists develop eye implant that helps the blind read again

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A tiny eye implant from Stanford scientists has helped people with severe vision loss read and recognize objects again.

Losing your sight doesn’t happen overnight. It fades slowly — faces blur, letters dissolve, light becomes shadow.

For millions around the world living with macular degeneration, the loss is permanent.

But now, a team of scientists believes they’ve found a way to bring some of that vision back — through a microscopic chip smaller than a grain of rice.

New hope for lost sight

At Stanford Medicine, researchers have developed a wireless eye implant that can partially restore sight to people blinded by advanced macular degeneration.

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The device, called the PRIMA chip, works together with a pair of smart glasses that use invisible infrared light to communicate visual information directly to the brain.

In a year-long clinical trial involving more than 30 participants across the U.S. and Europe, most regained the ability to read again — from street signs to books — after training with the new system.

Some even achieved visual sharpness close to 20/40, a milestone once thought impossible for this level of vision loss.

Published in the New England Journal of Medicine, the study marks a turning point in prosthetic vision.

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Previous technologies could only detect flashes of light, but this implant allowed patients to perceive forms, shapes, and letters — the foundation of functional sight.

Training the brain to see again

Trial participants — all aged 60 and above — began training roughly a month after surgery. For some, recognition came almost instantly; for others, it took months of practice to interpret the new visual signals.

After one year, 27 of 32 participants could read again, and nearly all showed measurable improvement in visual clarity.

The smart glasses used with the implant allow users to adjust brightness, contrast, and magnification up to twelve times.

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The system currently provides black-and-white vision, though researchers are already developing new software that can reproduce grayscale images, bringing face recognition and more natural perception within reach.

As with any pioneering technology, there were some complications — including temporary eye pressure increases and minor retinal bleeding — but most resolved within weeks. None resulted in permanent vision loss.

Looking ahead

The Stanford team is already working on a next-generation version of the PRIMA chip with far higher resolution.

For now, the tiny implant offers something once thought out of reach — the ability for those who’ve lived in darkness to once again read a page, recognize a face, and navigate the world with confidence.

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The article is based on information from The New England Journal of Medicine

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