Biohacking: How DIY Scientists Are Upgrading Their Bodies To Gain Superhuman Abilities

Published December 20, 2015
Updated August 8, 2017

Biohacking: Superhuman Night Vision

Science For The Masses Biohacking

Image Source: Mic

An independent group of biohackers located north of Los Angeles has taken night vision binoculars one step further: They’ve figured out how to drip night vision straight into the human eyeball.

The chemical in question, Chlorin e6 (Ce6), is actually found in nature, in deep-sea fish. The Science for the Masses biohacking group theorized that this chemical could enhance eyesight with the help of some comic book-worthy biohacking.

Of course, even DIY biologists must do their research. According to the lab’s medical officer, Jeffrey Tibbetts, there have been plenty of studies to prove both the efficacy and safety of Ce6. The chemical has been safely tested on rats and used to treat a variety of cancers in humans since the 1960s. So, why not put it in our eyes?

Biohacking Night Vision

Image Source: Mic

Using a device akin to a turkey baster, Tibbetts dripped 50 microliters of Ce6 into the eyes of a self-volunteered guinea pig named Gabriel Licina. Within one hour, Licina started to feel the effects. With the whites of his eyes now coated an eerie black, Licina and the others went out into the field to test their science project.

It worked. It began with small shapes, about ten meters off in the distance. Soon, Licina could spot complete figures 50 meters out. Every Ce6 test subject had a 100% success rate at spotting faraway figures in very low light, whereas the control group could only do so a third of the time.

author
Briana Jones
author
Briana Jones is a freelance writer, screenwriter, and artist roaming the hot sands of the southwest. She enjoys the strange and unusual, and green tea.
editor
John Kuroski
editor
John Kuroski is the editorial director of All That's Interesting. He graduated from New York University with a degree in history, earning a place in the Phi Alpha Theta honor society for history students. An editor at All That's Interesting since 2015, his areas of interest include modern history and true crime.