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Examination of the Control System of an Artificial Eye Implant

PIRETC-Proceeding of The International Research Education & Training Centre 2023 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Rashad Khalilov Aynur Jabiyeva Aynur Jabiyeva

Summary

Not relevant to microplastics — this paper describes the engineering of a motorised control system for ocular prosthetics (artificial eye implants).

Models

Due to various reasons, a person who is missing one eye may experience psychological as well as excruciating suffering. Enucleation and evisceration surgery are the most often used methods to remove a sick or injured eye. The patient is often fitted with a bespoke implant into the orbital tissues after the surgeon removes the eye. In order to keep the socket from looking hollow and depressed, this replaces volume. Once the socket has stabilized, a prosthetic shell—also known as an artificial eye, glass eye, or ocular prosthesis—is placed within. An ocular implant can mechanically replace the lost eye. There have been significant developments in this field. To replace the missing eye, an ocular prosthesis was developed. Physically, the prosthetic seems natural. The eye, however, is stationary or just slightly mobile. development of an independent ocular motor system is the objective of this study in order to give the artificial eye more realistic movement. The detection of natural eye movement is a crucial issue. This study includes an overview of eye movement detecting techniques. Then eye movement detection using the fusion approach is created. The first aspect that is recorded and stored is the eye movement. Then, during the experiment, the sensor array yields the eye movement signal, and the matching rule yields the eye position. The experimental system, fusion technology, and early findings are covered in the majority of this work. Keywords: Sensor array, fusion, artificial eye, orbital implant, and ocular control.

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