VISOR

VISOR

In the "Star Trek" fictional universe, a VISOR is a device used by the blind to artificially provide them with a sense of sight. The device scans the electromagnetic spectrum, creating visual input, and transmits it into the brain of the wearer via the optic nerves. It is a thin, curved device, with the sensors on the side, that covers the eyes and attaches at small input jacks implanted in the temples. The only VISOR seen on screen was used by Geordi La Forge, who was blind from birth. VISOR stands for "Visual Instrument and Sensory Organ Replacement", though the complete term never appeared in the series, only in novelizations and other written spin-offs.

The VISOR also caused him persistent pain, which could not be treated without interfering with the device. It can be presumed that use of a VISOR is very rare, since no other characters in the franchise have appeared with a similar enhancement, and both high-ranking doctors who served on the ship were unfamiliar with the device.

The device does not reproduce normal human vision, but does allow the character to "see" energy phenomena invisible to the naked human eye, as well as allowing him to view things at infrared and at microscopic levels. This also allowed the character to see human vital signs such as heart rate and temperature, giving him the ability to monitor moods and even detect lies. The character's special visual abilities were responsible, at least in part, for his unusually rapid advancement in rank. Twice in the series, Geordi refused to be granted natural vision, first by Q and later by Doctor Katherine Pulaski. Sometime between 2371 and 2373, before the time of the film "", the VISOR was replaced by prosthetic implants, performing the same functions, and depicted using a combination of cosmetic contact lenses and CGI.

Reality

New Scientist magazine reported on research as to whether a device similar to a VISOR can actually be created for blind or visually-impaired people. Partial sight has been successfully restored to blind rats by installing an implant behind the retina. [ [http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7216 'Bionic eye' may help reverse blindness - health - 31 March 2005 - New Scientist ] ]

As of 2006, 16 blind people worldwide have had sight partially restored in a procedure where electrodes implanted in their brains take impulses from a camera to allow patients to see lights and outlines of objects. [ [http://rdu.news14.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=82612 News 14 | 24 Hour Local News | TOP STORIES ] ]

LeVar Burton, who played the character of Geordi LaForge, disliked the VISOR prop because it restricted his peripheral vision – albeit less than its prototypes – and the constant pressure of the prop's arms on his temples caused headaches.

ee also

* Artificial eye
* Human echolocation

References

External links

*


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Visor — de una arma de fuego. Un visor es una parte de una cámara fotográfica o una arma de fuego. Cámara fotográfica El visor es una de las partes más importantes de cualquier cámara, puesto que es el modo que tiene el fotógrafo de encuadrar y componer… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Visor — Vis or, n. [OE. visere, F. visi[ e]re, fr. OF. vis. See {Visage}, {Vision}.] [Written also {visar}, {visard}, {vizard}, and {vizor}.] 1. A part of a helmet, arranged so as to lift or open, and so show the face. The openings for seeing and… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • visor — (Del lat. visor, ōris). 1. m. Prisma o sistema óptico que llevan ciertos aparatos fotográficos de mano y sirve para enfocarlos rápidamente. 2. En algunas armas de fuego, dispositivo óptico que ayuda a establecer la puntería o a corregirla …   Diccionario de la lengua española

  • visor — [vī′zər] n. [ME visere < Anglo Fr viser < OFr visiere < vis, a face: see VISAGE] 1. a) in armor, a movable part of a helmet, that could be lowered to cover the upper part of the face, with slits for seeing b) a movable section, made… …   English World dictionary

  • visor — index enshroud, veil Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • VISOR — vide supra Confirmatores testes, et hîc paulo ante. Tacitus quoque Visorum meminit, l. 16. Annal. c. 2. ubi de ludibrio thesauri per quietem reperti, Nero, ait, non auctoris, non ipsius negotii fide satis spectatâ, nec missis Visoribus, per quos… …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • visor — c.1300, front part of a helmet, from Anglo Fr. viser, from O.Fr. visiere, from vis face (see VISAGE (Cf. visage)). Meaning eyeshade is recorded from 1925 …   Etymology dictionary

  • visor — |ô| s. m. 1. Aquele que visa. 2. Dispositivo que se adapta aos aparelhos fotográficos portáteis para focar convenientemente o assunto escolhido. 3. Aparelho que serve para tomar a linha de visão …   Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa

  • visor — is the preferred spelling for the various kinds of covering for the face, not vizor …   Modern English usage

  • visor — (also vizor) ► NOUN 1) a movable part of a helmet that can be pulled down to cover the face. 2) a screen for protecting the eyes from unwanted light. 3) N. Amer. a stiff peak at the front of a cap. DERIVATIVES visored adjective. ORIGIN Old French …   English terms dictionary

  • Visor — Handspring war ein Hersteller von PDAs mit Palm OS Betriebssystem. Die Erfinder des Palm Pilot und Gründer der Unternehmung Palm waren Jeff Hawkins, Donna Dubinsky und Ed Colligan. Als 3Com im März 1997 Palm aufkaufte, ärgerten sich die drei… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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