neuroClues is a medtech startup developing a proprietary, portable eye-tracking device aimed at supporting the diagnosis of neurological disorders such as Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis, and stroke. The technology involves capturing high-speed eye movements at 800 frames per second through a headset worn by the patient. An AI-driven analysis then extracts data on parameters like latency and error rate, which can serve as disease biomarkers. By comparing these results against standard values from a healthy population, clinicians can potentially detect neurological conditions years before the onset of symptoms.
The device works by having the patient follow moving dots on a screen while wearing the headset. It is designed to be used in regular clinical settings without requiring specialized equipment or dark rooms. neuroClues claims its technology offers unrivaled speed and precision in a commercially deployed, non-static device, enabled by building its own hardware and software synchronized through patented approaches.
Founded in 2020 by neuroscience researchers Pierre Daye and Pierre Pouget, along with Antoine Pouppez, the company aims to create a "stethoscope for the brain" and help 10 million patients by 2032. It expects its first deployments in specialist settings like university hospitals in 2024, with the service being reimbursable through existing health insurance codes for eye-tracking tests.
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