text-only page produced automatically by LIFT Text Transcoder Skip all navigation and go to page contentSkip top navigation and go to directorate navigationSkip top navigation and go to page navigation
National Science Foundation
 
Discoveries
design element
Discoveries
Search Discoveries
About Discoveries
Discoveries by Research Area
Arctic & Antarctic
Astronomy & Space
Biology
Chemistry & Materials
Computing
Earth & Environment
Education
Engineering
Mathematics
Nanoscience
People & Society
Physics
 


Discovery
Graduate Student Invents'Printer' for Low-Cost Eyeglasses

MIT doctoral student Saul Griffith is an old-fashioned inventor with high-tech style. His inventions include a 'printer' for low-cost eyeglass lenses and electronic goggles to diagnose a person's eyeglass prescription.

Photo of Saul Griffith with his eyeglass lens 'printer.'

Saul Griffith with his eyeglass lens 'printer.'
Credit and Larger Version

April 5, 2004

MIT doctoral student Saul Griffith is an old-fashioned inventor with high-tech style. For his inventions, including a “printer” for low-cost eyeglass lenses and electronic goggles to diagnose a person’s eyeglass prescription, Griffith won the $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize for 2004.

As a participant in MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms (CBA), which is working to close the gap separating information technology from the rest of the physical world, Griffith has access to all the tools a modern-day tinkerer could ask for. CBA is funded by a $13.75 million Information Technology Research award from the National Science Foundation (NSF).

Out of his research on fabricating with mechanical logic, as well as his interest in applying emerging rapid prototyping technologies to social needs, Griffith came up with a way to address an issue faced by a billion people worldwide who can't afford traditional eyeglasses.

Griffith developed a "desktop printer" for eyeglass lenses that uses a patent-pending lens-molding technology to produce almost any prescription lens in less than 10 minutes and using about 40 cents' worth of materials.

But making the lenses is only half the problem. Properly diagnosing vision problems also requires expensive technologies that aren't available to many in the developing world. To bridge this gap, Griffith also invented a prototype device to test the human eye.

Patients put on the device, which looks like oversized goggles, and look at the world around them. A sensor monitors the lens in the patient’s eye and adjusts the device’s lens to cancel the refractive errors and get the correct prescription.

With Neil Houghton, Griffith has co-founded Low Cost Eyeglasses, a for-profit social enterprise, to make his inventions and other technologies for reducing the cost of prescription eyewear widely available in developing nations.

The Lemelson-MIT Student Prize also recognized Griffith's many other inventions. These include "e-rope" that can sense the strain of the load it bears; a "printer" made from LEGO blocks and a small heater that forms 3-D objects out of chocolate; a bicycle with a frame that can be easily personalized; and methods for manufacturing 3-D devices at micron and submicron scales

Griffith also shares his inventing urge through "Howtoons," one-page cartoons that teach science and engineering while they show children how to build their own toys, games and inventions out of everyday household items.

-- David Hart

Investigators
Saul Griffith
Neil Gershenfeld
Alex Pentland
Joseph Jacobson
Mitchel Resnick

Related Institutions/Organizations
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Locations
Massachusetts

Related Programs
Information Technology Research for National Priorities

Related Awards
#0122419 ITR/SY: Center for Bits and Atoms

Total Grants
$13,750,000

Related Websites
Howtoons: http://www.howtoons.org/
Center for Bits and Atoms: http://cba.mit.edu/
Low Cost Eyeglasses: http://www.lowcosteyeglasses.net/

border=0/


Print this page
Back to Top of page
  Web Policies and Important Links | Privacy | FOIA | Help | Contact NSF | Contact Webmaster | SiteMap  
National Science Foundation
The National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA
Tel:  (703) 292-5111, FIRS: (800) 877-8339 | TDD: (800) 281-8749
Last Updated:
March 14, 2005
Text Only


Last Updated: March 14, 2005