Use Case • Stroke
Recovery is a journey. We help you track it.
A short, guided screen session captures eye-movement behavior and turns it into a clear report — useful for rehabilitation support and follow-up.
Designed for monitoring and decision support. Not a replacement for clinical diagnosis.
Easy session
Simple on-screen guidance
Objective signal
Eye-movement behavior
Progress view
Compare across sessions
Progress at a glance
Rehabilitation monitoring
A calm, repeatable measurement you can follow over time.
Session 1baseline
Session 2follow-up
Session 3trend
Shortguided tasks
Repeatablesame protocol
Comparablesession-to-session
You receive a clear result
A concise report designed for rehabilitation support and longitudinal follow-up.
Handwriting and reading can change after stroke
A stroke can affect language and processing — including acquired dyslexia (new reading difficulties) —
and it can also affect writing/hand control. With rehabilitation, the brain can improve with practice —
like muscles improve with training.
Rough / shaky line • uneven rhythm (baseline)
Simulation only • real handwriting changes vary widely.
Smoother line • more consistent flow (after practice)
Simulation only • stroke can also affect reading (acquired dyslexia), attention, and processing speed.
This “rough → smoother” example represents why repeated monitoring matters: it helps teams see progress and adjust rehabilitation goals.
Made for follow-up
After stroke, small improvements can be hard to quantify. O’VISTA supports structured monitoring so teams and families can see change with more confidence — without adding friction for the patient.
1
Wear the glasses
Comfortable setup with minimal instructions.
2
Look at the screen
Short guided tasks that are easy to complete.
3
We analyze and summarize
Eye-movement signals → structured features → report.
4
Track progress
Repeat sessions and compare changes over time.
Want to see the report format?
Request a demo and we’ll show outputs designed for monitoring and follow-up.
