Doctors Told This Man His Vision Would Never Improve; He Decided to See for Himself

Play a video game long enough and you might get pretty good at it: post a new high score, reach a new level — or reverse a supposedly incurable birth defect.
That’s the payoff promised by a new game developed by young entrepreneur James Blaha.
When he was 9 or 10 years old, doctors told Blaha that he’d never be able to correct his lazy eye and thus, never be able to see in true stereo vision, according to Daily Motion. Because of a condition he was born with, Blaha lived his life in a flat world, seeing only in two dimensions. He was told the condition was irreversible.
Then, inspired by a TED talk about teaching adults with eye problems to perceive in 3-D, Blaha decided try it for himself, by employing his skills as a programmer.
He developed a video game to strengthen his weaker eye with Oculus Rift virtual-reality goggles. The game takes advantage of the fact that the goggles show each eye a separate image. By dimming the image in the user’s strong eye, Blaha’s game can force the player’s brain to use the weaker eye — strengthening it and training both eyes to work together.
Blaha says his game worked: For the first time, the world around him started to “pop” into three dimensions. He’s started a company, Diplopia, to further develop his video game and to help other people overcome lifelong disabilities. Earlier this year, Blaha raised over $20,000 through a crowdsourced fundraising campaign, convincing hundreds of people to kick in some money.
Clearly, they saw his potential and supported his (now 3-D) vision.
MORE: This Man Was Born Blind, But That Doesn’t Stop Him From Teaching Children to Read

A Dying Grandmother Takes One Last Stroll With the Help of This Incredible Invention

Most people think of virtual reality as video games. But as the touching video below shows, virtual reality can also be a useful tool to help improve the quality of someone’s life.
As The Rift Arcade reports, video game artist Priscilla Firstenberg sent a note to Oculus VR, the Irvine, California-based developers behind the Oculus Rift, to help fulfill her terminally ill grandmother’s wish to go outside again. A virtual reality headset, the Oculus Rift is the company’s first product and is currently in development after a successful Kickstarter campaign.
For Priscilla’s cancer-stricken grandmother, Roberta, the 3D headset gave her the chance to stroll along a sunny Tuscan village right from her own home. Her reactions are nothing short of amazing—she describes touching butterflies, hearing the sounds of the beach and seagulls, and looking at all the beautiful colors.
“It’s just like dropping into a mirage, dropping straight down into a bubble of new life. It’s beautiful,” she says in the video.
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But it was the simple action of walking up the stairs that Roberta found the most awe-inspiring. “Her favorite part was just being able to walk up and down the stairs again of the villa in the Tuscany demo,” Priscilla told The Rift Arcade. “I guess we take a lot of things for granted.”
Using the Oculus Rift’s version of Google Street View, Roberta was even able to take a virtual stroll and see an old snap of herself standing with her beloved pet dog.
Unfortunately, about four weeks after her first use of the Oculus, Roberta’s condition took a turn for the worse and she passed away. However, Roberta’s story is a reminder of the incredible possibilities of virtual reality, especially beyond entertainment purposes and video gaming.
As she says in the video, virtual reality can be a real form of therapy: “You can be in pain like I have pain but somehow when you see a blue butterfly reach out to kiss you…it makes you realize that we all are part of this world and this world is very precious to us.”
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