Technique enhances digital television viewing for visually-impairedJanuary 16, 2008Boston, MA-Scientists at Schepens Eye Research Institute have found that people with low vision can improve their ability to see and enjoy television with a new technique that allows them to enhance the contrast of images of people and objects of interest on their digital televisions. A study in the edition of the Journal of the Optical Society of America published online in November 2007 and issued in print in January 2008, demonstrates that patients with macular degeneration prefer watching TV with this contrast enhancement and that the level of enhancement they choose depends on how much vision they have lost with their disease. Nearly four million Americans suffer from vision loss from diseases--such as macular degeneration--that impede their central vision and their ability to comfortably view the images on any television, cutting them off from a significant source of information and entertainment enjoyed by the mainstream. Often such patients cannot see faces of characters or other details that make a broadcast understandable. Some solutions have been special telescopic glasses, which can help patients see details but often cut off parts of the image, lessening context, and large television screens, which can be quite costly. The new method--developed by Dr. Eli Peli, the Institute's low vision expert, the Moakley Scholar in Aging Eye Research, and a professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School, is the latest of several image-enhancing innovations his research team has created to improve TV watching for the visually impaired. It is also the first developed for digital television images. "We knew it was time to address the changing technology," says Peli, who pointed out that digital television will replace traditional television technology over the next few years due to government mandate. Working within the "decoder" that makes digital television images possible, Peli and his colleagues were able to make a simple change that could give every digital TV the contrast enhancing potential for the benefit of the visually impaired. "The same modification could easily be made to new HDTVs, and digital cable set top boxes," says Matthew Fullerton, the paper's first author, and a student of electronic engineering from the University of York in England who is currently working on his Master's degree in Peli's lab. To test their new technology, the team presented eight digital videos to 24 subjects with vision impairment and six with normal vision. Each patient was given a remote control, which allowed him/her to increase or decrease the contrast of the image. Patients manipulated over-enhanced and blurry images for the greatest clarity. The research team learned that even subjects with normal sight selected some enhancement and that the amount of enhancement selected by those with visual problems varied depending upon the level of contrast sensitivity loss they experienced due to their disease. All this demonstrated to the team that the device was both usable and useful to the subjects, even those without vision problems. Peli is now working with Analog Devices Inc. to create a prototype chip that could be included in all future generations of digital television. "The technology we created is quite simple and can easily and cheaply be incorporated into even the newest technologies for television and internet video." Peli adds that he believes that as the population ages, this technology will be used by more and more of those whose eyes are going through a normal change as they get older as well as those more severely impaired. Schepens Eye Research Institute |
|||||||||||||||||||||
| Related Digital Television Current Events and Digital Television News Articles Large-screen projection in 3D Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Architecture and Software Technology FIRST in Berlin are voyaging into another dimension when it comes to projection systems. In the living room of the future, a multifunctional, large-format projection screen (1.5 x 2.5 meters) will open up a veritable window to the world. The researchers have developed software that enables the content of different media to be integrated in a single system. 3D and HDTV-format films (High Definition Television), digital television, slide projector shows, video games and 3D architectural scenes can all be shown on a single screen. The various types of content are interactively controlled using a PDA, not u Your personal news show The modern-day capabilities of the Internet and those of the familiar household TV are beginning to merge. It is possible to receive TV programs over the Internet using streaming technologies. On the other hand, TV displays Internet-based computer applications through the increasingly common set-top boxes designed to receive digital TV. The convergence of the two media is leading to interactive, digital television. The downside is that, instead of providing useful services, the Web-enabled terminals could turn into yet another purveyor of unwanted information - the much decried information overload. In Germany alone there are 283 private and public TV stations broadcasting a total of some 70 Broadband satellite Internet access for schools in rural Ireland SchoolSat is a trial service providing fast access to the Internet for schools in rural Ireland using leading-edge satellite technology developed by Web-Sat in Dublin and supported by the Telecommunications department of the European Space Agency (ESA). The aim of the trial is to investigate how far this technology can offer a solution to connect schools to the Internet, to build networks between schools and to transmit large files of information be it data, video, audio, or graphics. The service is based on the Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB) standard which is deployed Europe-wide (and is becoming accepted as a worldwide standard) for digital television. It allows the user to receive In Invitation to the Media - Forum in Brighton gazes into the future of educational television The days of educational television relegated to the middle of the night could soon be numbered. Instead, in the near future, viewers could watch a personalised television channel with programmes on demand. And their TV could put them in touch with others on the same course to compare notes and experiences. These are some of the possibilities for the future of educational television to be explored at a forum in Brighton on 11 and 12 July. The Interactive Educational Content Forum is organised by the Human Centred Technology Group at the University of Sussex and funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. Its aim is to bring together content providers from the media with Coming to a cinema near you - courtesy of ESA We`ve got digital television. Next comes digital cinema. Thanks to ESA, cinema-goers in five European countries will be able to get an early taste of the new technology later this summer. As part of an ESA-funded project, ten cinemas in Austria, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK will be screening movies transmitted and played digitally rather than by the conventional analogue method. Switching off analogue TV will silence radio mikes Actors could be struck dumb when everyone has digital television SWITCHING off Britain`s analogue television network threatens to silence its theatres, concert halls and TV studios. After 2006, the government plans to raise billions of pounds by auctioning licences to use the UHF frequencies currently occupied by analogue TV transmissions. Two years ago it made £22 billion when it sold off a range of microwave frequencies to phone companies for their "next generation" 3G services. The buyers in the next round could be mobile phone service providers who want to feed video into 3G handsets. Lords Report on EU e-Commerce Policy Development and Co-ordination An all-party House of Lords Report published today looks at e-commerce and how policy in the UK and in the European Union towards e-commerce has developed. The Report also examines co-ordination at UK Government and EU institutional level. The Report takes a broad look at the impact of e-commerce in the UK, with special regard to activities in the EU embodied in the eEurope Action Plan which was agreed at the Special Economic Summit at Lisbon on 23 and 24 March and endorsed at the European Council meeting on 19 June at Feira. Lord Brooke of Alverthorpe, who chaired the inquiry, said: “e-Commerce is a phenomenon which has grown rapidly and which is affecting all of us. We wanted to find Game on More Digital Television Current Events and Digital Television News Articles |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||