Now reading -
Livewired: The Inside Story of the Ever-Changing Brain (2020) by the neuroscientist, David Eagleman.
About a third through this and I have found it quite interesting - perhaps more as to future possibilities - such that, apart from AI being the major aspect of the future, advanced technology (especially as to brain-interfacing but also other such) will likely be able to solve so many issues where individuals have some deficiency as to sensing - lacking eyesight, hearing, touch, etc. - and as to expanding the range of such things. Given that the brain is not so source-dependent upon any inputs, and where it soon adapts to whatever source of stimulus that we can devise and that provides meaningful information.
Some things I didn't know - with the first possibly happening to me in the future - that when a cornea is replaced after cataract surgery, UV vision is enabled to some extent because the normal cornea filters this out.
Also, babies have been born with no nose, no eyeballs (so no sight obviously), and no ears - not all as to one individual of course.
en.wikipedia.org
So I can recommend this book, even if four years out of date - and that is a long time in such technologies.