Impossible! Isn't it? Well, the word impossibility is antithetical to the field of science. Scientists don't believe in impossibility. Everything is possible in realm of science, a typical scientist would say. Change is one indisputable ingredient of science. That this is like this today is no basis to believe, scientifically, that it would remain so forever. Scientific belief in a phenomenon is only potent for as long as experiments can validate. Otherwise, a new scientific opinion would arise to challenge the status quo.
[Source: wikimedia common. Author: Master Sgt. Lance Cheung. CC BY-SA 3.0 licensed]
So YES! You can actually see with your tongue by using a sensory substitution enabling device called BrainPort, which enables the blind and visually impaired to have experience of vision by sending the light signals received on the nerves on the tongue's surface to the brain. How and why such is possible is the chief essence of this article.
The defeat of agelong belief that "only the eyes can see" using brain neuroplasticity and sensory substitution arguments
Until Paul Back-y-Rita demonstrated his idea of sensory substitutuon via brain plasticity, neuroscientists have wrongly believed that brain is compartmentalized. That is to say, with respect to vision, that visual information emanates from the eyes and are relayed to the visual cortex of the brain through a network of optic nerves. If any part of the system is damaged in the process of this to and from movement of visual impulses, then sight will be impossible. To put it in other words, only the eyes can see.
This agelong misconception was motivated by the work of the early French neurologist Paul Broca, who found lesions in the frontal lobe of a speechless man. And therefore concluded that specific areas of the brain is in charge of performing specific functions. Many studies would later seem to agree with his conclusion.
However, Neuroscientist Paul Bach-y-Rita, a rehabilitation doctor at University of Wisconsin, Madison, and a pioneer in the field of neuroplasticity (i.e the proven idea that adult brain can learn and reorganize itself for optimal performance with training), did not agree with Dr Broca's conclusion. Bach-y-Rita, while alive, devoted much of his professional life to understanding the single revolutionary concept that our senses are interchangeable.
 — a sort of human machine interface that make use of the tongue as a medium for visual substitution in blind people. TDU is the major component of BrainPort, which itself is the product of Wicab Inc that allows blind people to experience sense of vision through the tongue.
[The original braille code for the French language, as devised by Louis Braille c.1824. Wikimedia commons. Author: SteveStrummer. CC0 1.0 licensed]
A taste of vision: Paul Bach-y-Rita's experiment (How BrainPort works)
The success of Bach-y-Rita's experiment was what gave rise to the development of BrainPort device (that enables blind people to achieve vision by tongue stimulation) by a team of neuroscientists led by him. The procedure that we will be giving consent to in this section does not only represent Bach-y-Rita's experiment, it is also a representation of how a typical BrainPort works.
Naturally, approximately two million optic nerves are involved in the transmission of visual impulses from the retina to the visual cortex region of the brain. Retina is the part of the eyes where light signals are converted to nerve impulses before being sent to brain for interpretation as images.
With BrainPort, the eyes are bypassed and no visual signals are sent to the retina. Instead, visual information are gathered by a small digital camera that is built on the middle of a pair of sunglasses worn by the test subject.
The visual information collected by the digital camera is then transmitted to a handheld base unit, which is about the size of a cell phone. This base unit has such components as zoom control, light settings and shock intensity levels in addition to a Central Processing Unit (CPU). The CPU helps process the visual information so received into electrical impulses and thus replaces the function of the retina.
The electrical impulses from the CPU component of the base unit are sent to a set of 400 microelectrodes that are arranged in a lollipop-like paddle sitting on the tongue. As these microelectrodes receive electrical signals from the CPU, they stimulate the densely packed nerves at the surface of the tongue, giving the sensation of Pop Rocks candies or champagne bubbles to the test subject or the user.
[Source: pixabay CC0 licensed]
It is these sensations being felt on the tongue that the user's brain learns to interpret, over a period of time, as a kind of visual sensation. Even with a normally sighted person, the brain does not see. It only interprets the electrical signals from the retina and then create a picture that helps us move around and find nearby objects.
"In any case, within 15 minutes of using the device, blind people can begin interpreting spatial information via the BrainPort," says William Seiple, research director at the nonprofit vision healthcare and research organization Lighthouse International.
The electrodes spatially correlate with the pixels so that if the camera detects light fixtures in the middle of a dark hallway, electrical stimulations will occur along the center of the tongue.
"It becomes a task of learning, no different than learning to ride a bike," Arnoldussen says, adding that the "process is similar to how a baby learns to see. Things may be strange at first, but over time they become familiar." Source
Conclusion
Paul Bach-y-Rita's research has shown that indeed there is nothing special about optic nerves (eyes). What was thought as its special function can be taken up by another sense organ (tongue) by compelling the visual cortex region of the brain to interpret it as a visual sensation via training. Indeed, the brain does not care about where the information comes from.
"Do you need visual input to see?" Bach-y-Rita asked. "Hell, no. If you respond to light and you perceive, then it's sight."
Many studies conducted years later to evaluate the veracity of Bach-y-Rita's claims seemed to have agreed with his position that senses can be redirected. For instance, in the late '90s, neurologist Alvaro Pascual-Leone of Harvard University carried brain scans of blind people and normal sighted people while they were made to read Braille with their reading fingers. He found that while the two groups were performing the same task of reading Braille, the visual cortex of the blind people lit up but those of the sighted people remained the same.
One would be right to conclude, therefore, that Bach-y-Rita's research is teaching an entirely different approach to understanding the concept of sight —that sight is not a mere detailed understanding of light and space around us; it is all about a particular feeling. Thanks for reading.
References for further reading
- Rewiring the brain to create new senses
- Brain plasticity as a basis for recovery of function in humans
- "Seeing" with your tongue — sensory substitution using a simple alternative to the retinal chip
- "Seeing" through the tongue: cross-modal plasticity in the congenital lyrics blind
- Can you see with your tongue?
- Device lets the tongue see
- A taste of vision: device translates from camera to brain, via the tongue
- Tasting the light: Device lets the blind "see" with their tongues
- Device that helps blind people see with their tongues just won FDA approval
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