Log in

View Full Version : Video games tackle 'lazy eye'



Janus
28th March 2006, 21:58
Originally posted by BBC News
Playing virtual reality computer games may help treat the condition known as amblyopia, or lazy eye, say researchers.

In patients with amblyopia, one eye works better than the other. Because the amblyopic eye is inferior for some reason, the brain decides to use the good eye.

Over time, the neural connection to the bad eye becomes gradually weaker in favour of the good eye.

The traditional way of fixing the problem is for patients to force the bad eye to work harder by wearing a patch over the good eye.

The treatment usually involves patching for around 400 hours and can cause the eyes not to work together, resulting in double vision.

Researchers at Nottingham University say that an experimental treatment using virtual reality (VR) may offer the best of both worlds, encouraging the lazy eye to be more active and getting both eyes to work together.

"Traditionally VR has been used to present realistic environments in 3D so you imagine you're there because of the depth of the world around you," said Richard Eastgate of the university's Virtual Reality Applications Research Team.

"But we're using VR to make something unrealistic. You could call it virtual unreality," he told Digital Planet.

"We're actually presenting two different versions of the world to each eye."

Effective treatment

In one experiment, the team has been trying out a racing game where the computer sends images of the player's own car to the amblyopic eye, but the other cars go to the good eye.

Obstacles on the track are sent alternately to each eye, so both eyes team up to get the patient through the game.

The researchers are encouraged by the results.

"We thought we'd develop a system that needed about 400 hours of treatment like patching. In the end we achieved the same effect in an hour," said Dr Eastgate.

It is not entirely clear how the treatment works on a neurological level.

Research in the past has tried static images. But the team believes that modern virtual reality has allowed different but related dynamic information to be sent to each eye for the first time.

"The technique hasn't been proven with rigorous trials but the early results show a very rapid effective treatment through this system," said Dr Eastgate.

Interesting. Those of you with amblyopia, start playing....

TomRK1089
29th March 2006, 02:46
Interesting, I have 'lazy eye' in my right eye, and have always been an avid video game fan. Lately my vision has been improving, and my optometrist even commented on it. Perhaps even normal 3D games can have a small cumulative effect? Not as fast or as powerful as the VR games, but...

ÑóẊîöʼn
29th March 2006, 07:39
I think any activity which requires you to track objects with both eyes in order to do it right would be good, I think the need for depth perception is the key.

loveme4whoiam
30th March 2006, 19:24
Haha! Take that Jack Thompson, you bastard. Hmm, I'd better retract that, lest his Mighty Legal Sword of Justice be brought upon Malte. Thompson, you are not a bastard. You are instead the malodious offspring of a goat and the George W. Bush's dumber sister.

Ahem, anyway. I think this supports the claim that people who play computer games are often better drivers, since they are better at visualising 3D spaces.

Communism
31st March 2006, 08:50
I was told that video games or concentrating on something with my "lazy eye" would help me but sadly it didnt work and it's just got worse.

TomRK1089
1st April 2006, 15:21
Heh, saw the Jack Thompson reference. What a prick that guy is. I've shot many hundreds of virtual people, and never shot any real people. Take that! :D