Intended purpose

What is CorteXR Studio?

CorteXR Studio is non-medical immersive activity software for therapist-led sessions. It gives you and your team a configurable activity library for supervised use, including activities involving visual search, memory, attention, sequencing, planning, sorting, object use, and everyday simulations.

Is CorteXR Studio a medical device?

No. CorteXR Studio is not intended to diagnose, treat, monitor, prevent, or alleviate any disease, injury, or impairment.

Is Studio a rehabilitation product?

No. Studio is non-medical activity software. If you are looking for regulated cognitive stroke rehabilitation, see CorteXR Stroke.

Does Stroke evidence apply to Studio?

No. CorteXR Stroke evidence and medical claims should not be read as claims for CorteXR Studio. Studio has a separate intended purpose and different claims.

People and practice fit

Who is CorteXR Studio for?

Studio is for occupational therapists, independent practitioners, small therapy practices, private clinics, and practice teams who run supervised activity sessions.

Can Studio be used by a solo OT?

That is one of the intended audiences. Studio is designed to be practical for small teams, with optional managed headset support for practices that want help with setup, onboarding, updates, and support.

Do I need VR experience?

Studio is designed to be practical for you and your team. The managed headset route can help reduce setup friction and support onboarding.

Activities

What activities are included?

Studio activities can include visual search, sequencing, planning, memory, attention, sorting, object use, prompts, graded challenge, and everyday simulations.

Are activities configurable?

Where an activity supports it, challenge can be adjusted through prompts, object number, visual load, sequence length, task structure, repetition, or variation.

How do you choose an activity?

Start with the session need. You might choose visual search for a simple spatial task, sorting for object choices and rules, sequencing for step-based activity, or everyday simulations for familiar task-like scenes.

Spatial activity data

What is spatial activity data?

Spatial activity data is information about how an activity unfolded. It can include task completion, object choices, prompts, hesitations, retries, and activity history.

Does spatial activity data assess a client?

No. Spatial activity data is intended to support therapist-led session review. It is not diagnosis, assessment, clinical monitoring, or outcome measurement.

How should therapists use activity review?

Activity review should be read alongside direct observation, professional context, and your own notes. It can support discussion about what happened during the session.

Headsets and setup

Do I need my own headset?

This depends on product configuration and compatibility. Studio can include an optional managed headset route for practices that want support with setup and device readiness.

What does managed headset support mean?

Managed support can help with setup, onboarding, updates, practical readiness, and support arrangements, depending on the agreed package.

What about cleaning and storage?

Each practice remains responsible for its own cleaning, hygiene, storage, and risk-management routines. Studio resources can provide practical considerations for shared headset use.

Can Studio be used outside occupational therapy?

Occupational therapists and small therapy practices are primary audiences, but Studio may also suit other teams that run supervised activity sessions and need structured immersive material.

What is the difference between Studio and Stroke?

Studio is non-medical immersive activity software for therapist-led sessions. Stroke is the regulated CorteXR product route for cognitive stroke rehabilitation.

What can spatial activity data show?

Spatial activity data can show how an activity unfolded, such as object choices, prompts, hesitations, retries, task completion, and activity history. It supports session review and is not diagnosis, assessment, clinical monitoring, or outcome measurement.

Can I use Studio with my existing practice materials?

Yes. Treat Studio as an additional activity resource. You decide how it fits alongside existing activities, materials, and professional workflow.

How do I know whether Studio is right for my practice?

Start with the use case. Studio is most likely to fit if you need structured immersive activities, have supervised session time available, and want practical support around headset setup and activity use.

Where should I start if I am new to Studio?

Start with the CorteXR Studio overview, then read VR software for occupational therapists or Studio for private practice, depending on your role.

Where should I start if I am comparing activities?

Start with the Studio activity library. It explains the main activity families and links to specific articles on visual search, sequencing, memory, attention, sorting, and everyday simulations.

Where should I start if I am worried about setup?

Start with managed headset support, then read VR headset setup for therapists and VR session workflow for therapists.

Where should I start if I need to compare Studio and Stroke?

Start with CorteXR Studio vs CorteXR Stroke. It explains how the non-medical Studio route differs from the regulated Stroke product route.

Product routes

How is Studio different from CorteXR Stroke?

Studio is non-medical immersive activity software for therapist-led sessions. Stroke is the regulated CorteXR product route for cognitive stroke rehabilitation.

Which product should I explore?

Explore Studio if you want configurable immersive activities for professional sessions. Explore Stroke if you are considering cognitive stroke rehabilitation, clinical evidence, patient pathways, or regulated product information.

Explore CorteXR Studio

Still deciding whether Studio fits your practice?

Contact about Studio
Explore Studio for occupational therapists