What non-medical means here
For Studio, non-medical means the product is intended to provide structured activity material for professional sessions. It does not claim to diagnose, treat, monitor, prevent, or alleviate any disease, injury, or impairment.
You remain responsible for:
- choosing the activity
- deciding whether VR is suitable
- supervising the session
- pacing and support
- interpreting what happened
- deciding what to do next
Studio provides activity environments and review material. It does not provide clinical judgement.
What you can still use it for
Non-medical does not mean empty or passive. In a supervised session, you can still use Studio to create activity moments such as:
- visual search activities
- sequencing and planning activities
- memory and attention activities
- sorting and object-use activities
- everyday simulations
- prompts and configurable challenge
- activity history for session review
The important distinction is what you infer from those moments. They can help you discuss and plan a session, but they are not a diagnosis, assessment, treatment effect, or outcome measure.
What not to infer
Activity history can show what happened inside a task: object choices, prompts, hesitations, retries, completion, and notes. That can be helpful, but do not treat it as:
- cognitive assessment
- recovery monitoring
- treatment of impairment
- outcome improvement claims
- patient progress tracking
How this differs from CorteXR Stroke
CorteXR Stroke is the product route for cognitive stroke rehabilitation. It includes clinical, patient, rehabilitation, evidence, and assurance information because that is the appropriate context for that product.
CorteXR Studio has a different intended purpose and different claims. Stroke evidence should not be read as evidence for Studio.
For the full comparison, see CorteXR Studio vs CorteXR Stroke.
Studio and Stroke at a glance
| Topic | Studio route | Stroke route |
|---|---|---|
| Audience | therapists, clients, people, practices | clinicians, patients, stroke survivors, services |
| Purpose | activity sessions | cognitive stroke rehabilitation |
| Data | session review, activity history | clinical pathway and product-specific review |
| Product claims | non-medical activity use | regulated rehabilitation claims where supported |
| Next step | register interest in Studio | request clinical information |
Why the distinction matters in practice
The distinction protects expectations. Monitoring recovery implies clinical monitoring. Assessing cognitive function implies assessment. Rehabilitation implies a medical or therapy outcome claim.
Studio therefore stays focused on what you can use in practice: activities, configuration, supervision, review material, and optional headset support. That clarity helps you decide whether Studio fits your setting without importing claims from the Stroke product.
When this distinction becomes important
This distinction becomes important when a visitor sees words such as cognition, memory, attention, planning, or sequencing. In Studio, those words describe activity demands. They do not turn the software into a diagnosis, assessment, monitoring, treatment, or rehabilitation product.
How CorteXR keeps the routes separate
CorteXR keeps the product routes separate by explaining what Studio is, what it is not, and where to go if the visitor needs the regulated Stroke product.
For Studio, the focus is activity sessions, professional supervision, configuration, spatial activity data, and review. For Stroke, the focus can include cognitive stroke rehabilitation, evidence, and clinical product information.
This separation appears throughout the site, not only in a disclaimer at the bottom of a page.
How CorteXR Studio fits
CorteXR Studio gives you a configurable immersive activity library for supervised sessions. It can support activity selection, graded challenge, session review, and optional managed headset support.
It remains non-medical activity software and does not replace professional judgement.
Related Studio resources
- CorteXR Studio vs CorteXR Stroke
- CorteXR Studio overview
- VR software for occupational therapists
- CorteXR Stroke
Practical takeaway
Non-medical activity software can still be valuable. The point is to be honest about what kind of value it provides.
Studio provides activity material, configuration, session review, and optional headset support. It does not provide medical judgement or regulated rehabilitation claims. That clarity helps the right people understand the product and helps protect the distinction between Studio and Stroke.
FAQ
Is non-medical VR activity software still useful in practice?
Yes. It can provide structured activity material for therapist-led sessions, while leaving professional decisions with you.
Does non-medical mean no review data?
No. Studio can support session review with activity information, but that information is not diagnosis, assessment, clinical monitoring, or outcome measurement.
Can Studio mention memory or attention?
Yes, when describing activity demands. Studio activities can involve memory, attention, sequencing, planning, sorting, and visual search. That does not make Studio a treatment or assessment product.
When should I use CorteXR Stroke instead?
Use the Stroke route if your interest is cognitive stroke rehabilitation, clinical evidence, patient pathways, or regulated product information.
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Studio note: CorteXR Studio is non-medical activity software for therapist-led sessions. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, monitor, prevent, or alleviate any disease, injury, or impairment.