Neuro-Eye therapy recovers sight
Partial sight loss following stroke affects around 55,000 people across Europe each year. There are also many thousands of people who have suffered vision loss following a brain injury.

Now, Aberdeen University spin-out company Sight Science has launched a Neuro-Eye Therapy (NeET) system that it believes could help users regain some vision.
Sight Science patients are given a laptop and chin rest and are required to complete a computer-based exercise - which takes around 30min - once or twice daily over six months.
Patients using the interactive computer program are presented repeatedly and systematically with visual patterns specifically designed to encourage plasticity within an injured brain.
Arash Sahraie, a professor of Vision Sciences at Aberdeen University and founder of Sight Science, said: ’Not too long ago, clinicians and scientists generally thought that, after brain injury, the adult brain could not be altered. But, within the past decade, the concept of brain plasticity - when the brain can adapt to and compensate for its circumstance - has become well established. We now know that if we encourage a change in the brain, then changes are likely to take place and if no intervention occurs, no improvements are expected.’
Register now to continue reading
Thanks for visiting The Engineer. You’ve now reached your monthly limit of news stories. Register for free to unlock unlimited access to all of our news coverage, as well as premium content including opinion, in-depth features and special reports.
Benefits of registering
-
In-depth insights and coverage of key emerging trends
-
Unrestricted access to special reports throughout the year
-
Daily technology news delivered straight to your inbox
Ultra Black Coating to Reduce Satellite Light Pollution
Sounds like something akin to "painting the Forth bridge" as the number of satellites already plus future additions means they'll never...