Tivadar Ruxandra I, Chappaz Cédrick, Anaflous Fatima, Roche Jean, Murray Micah M
The LINE (Laboratory for Investigative Neurophysiology), Department of Radiology, University Hospital Center and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Lausanne and Fondation Asile des Aveugles, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Front Neurosci. 2020 Mar 20;14:197. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00197. eCollection 2020.
In the event of visual impairment or blindness, information from other intact senses can be used as substitutes to retrain (and replace) visual functions. Abilities including reading, mental representation of objects and spatial navigation can be performed using tactile information. Current technologies can convey a restricted library of stimuli, either because they depend on real objects or renderings with low resolution layouts. Digital haptic technologies can overcome such limitations. The applicability of this technology was previously demonstrated in sighted participants. Here, we reasoned that visually-impaired and blind participants can create mental representations of letters presented haptically in normal and mirror-reversed form without the use of any visual information, and mentally manipulate such representations. Visually-impaired and blind volunteers were blindfolded and trained on the haptic tablet with two letters (either L and P or F and G). During testing, they haptically explored on any trial one of the four letters presented at 0°, 90°, 180°, or 270° rotation from upright and indicated if the letter was either in a normal or mirror-reversed form. Rotation angle impacted performance; greater deviation from 0° resulted in greater impairment for trained and untrained normal letters, consistent with mental rotation of these haptically-rendered objects. Performance was also generally less accurate with mirror-reversed stimuli, which was not affected by rotation angle. Our findings demonstrate, for the first time, the suitability of a digital haptic technology in the blind and visually-impaired. Classic devices remain limited in their accessibility and in the flexibility of their applications. We show that mental representations can be generated and manipulated using digital haptic technology. This technology may thus offer an innovative solution to the mitigation of impairments in the visually-impaired, and to the training of skills dependent on mental representations and their spatial manipulation.
在出现视力障碍或失明的情况下,来自其他未受损感官的信息可作为替代品来重新训练(并替代)视觉功能。包括阅读、物体心理表征和空间导航在内的能力可以通过触觉信息来完成。当前技术所能传达的刺激库有限,这要么是因为它们依赖于真实物体,要么是因为渲染的布局分辨率较低。数字触觉技术可以克服这些限制。此前已在视力正常的参与者中证明了这项技术的适用性。在此,我们推断,视力受损和失明的参与者可以在不使用任何视觉信息的情况下,通过触觉创建正常和镜像反转形式呈现的字母的心理表征,并在心理上对这些表征进行操作。视力受损和失明的志愿者被蒙上眼睛,在触觉平板电脑上接受两个字母(L和P或F和G)的训练。在测试过程中,他们在任何一次试验中通过触觉探索以直立状态旋转0°、90°、180°或270°呈现的四个字母之一,并指出该字母是正常形式还是镜像反转形式。旋转角度影响了表现;与直立状态的偏差越大,对训练过和未训练过的正常字母的损害就越大,这与这些通过触觉呈现的物体的心理旋转一致。对于镜像反转的刺激,表现通常也不太准确,且不受旋转角度的影响。我们的研究结果首次证明了数字触觉技术对盲人和视力受损者的适用性。传统设备在可及性和应用灵活性方面仍然有限。我们表明,可以使用数字触觉技术生成和操作心理表征。因此,这项技术可能为减轻视力受损者的障碍以及训练依赖心理表征及其空间操作的技能提供一种创新解决方案。