Skip to main content

Virtual reality being used to help football players recover from concussions

Concussions are a serious issue in contact sports like football. Numerous studies over the past decade have given insight to not only the short-term ramifications but the long-term ones as well. Even smaller collisions add up over the course of a career.

Currently, there are a number of tech innovations that are working hard to make football and other sports safer for the players. Now, SyncThink has adapted another recent innovation, virtual reality, to discover concussions sooner and with more accuracy. Within one minute, the headset can highlight early signs of brain trauma.

When a concussion occurs, the connections between our brain and our eyes are impaired. This leads to variability and jitter in visual performance. This same issue occurs in thinking and body movement, but eye movement is the most accurate way of measuring the severity.

By using a DK2 Oculus Rift and eye sensors, the EyeSync headset is able to provide a quick and accurate test for any trauma to the brain. A simple circular visual stimulus runs for 15 seconds and repeats four times. The headset records the eye movement and immediately produces the results.

To make the EyeSync system user-friendly, the unit is highly portable. Weighing in at less than five pounds, it can easily be carried to the injured player.

Unpacking Concussion

According to Tech Crunch, the headset is already being utilized by Stanford University’s athletic department. Indiana University will also begin using EyeSync technology to study sub-concussive head impacts.

“By tracking sub-concussive impacts combined with various parameters, we have witnessed a glimpse, but plausible hope that some modalities could predict a concussion before it occurs,” said Keisuke Kawata, assistant professor of kinesiology at Indiana University. “It is my priority to establish brain-injury specific objective markers to ensure soldiers and athletes’ safety while sustaining the highest level of performance.”

Garrett Hulfish
Garrett is the kind of guy who tells you about all the tech you haven't heard of yet. He also knows too much about other…
FDA clears first-ever smartphone app for insulin delivery
Someone checking their insulin levels.

People with diabetes will have an easier time getting insulin into their bodies with just one tap on their phone. The Food and Drug Administration has cleared the first-ever smartphone app developed by Tandem Diabetes Care to program insulin dosage for its t:slim X2 insulin pump users.

Tandem Diabetes Care, a leading insulin delivery and diabetes technology company, based in California, made the historic announcement on Wednesday, saying that its app is the first app for both Android and iOS capable of delivering insulin from a smartphone. Insulin delivery previously had to be conducted from the pump alone.

Read more
ClipDart is an on-demand barber app aimed at people of color
ClipDart founder, Kyle Parker.

It’s funny how we can take certain things for granted, like haircuts. Over the course of more than 50 years of living in different cities, different neighborhoods, or even visiting different countries, not once have I ever worried about whether I could find someone who could cut my hair the way I liked. Then again, I’m white.

But if you’re a person of color, it can be an entirely different experience. That’s what Kyle Parker discovered when he left his hometown of Chicago in 2013 to attend Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa, population 9,031. While 24% of Grinnell College’s students identify themselves as people of color, fewer than 10% of residents of the city of Grinnell would say the same of themselves.

Read more
Circular confirms its $259 smart ring is coming to the U.S.
best wearables of ces 2022 circular ring

The Circular smart ring is finally going to be available for pre-order on Sunday, February 27, via the Circular website and will cost $259. The wearable tech will be available for presale in European countries (France, Germany, the U.K., and Italy,) the United States, Australia, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Pre-orders will go live at 1:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, February 27. Those who pre-order the smart ring should expect delivery between April and June 2022, according to a Circular press release.

Circular doesn't clarify what ring sizes will be available when presales go live, however, the company has said that seven sizes for both men and women will be available. Digital Trends has reached out for clarification on the available sizes, and will update this article when we hear back. The Circular smart ring also comes in four different colors that can be switched out with replaceable outer shells: Black, rose gold, silver, and gold.

Read more