Cognitive Clinical Protocol v1.0

Rebuild Cognitive Memory

The world's first AI-driven **Neuro-Cognitive Enhancement** system. We go beyond slowing decline by helping reactivate neural pathways linked to **long-term memory** and **executive control**.

Digital Therapeutics Non-invasive intervention
100+ Biomarkers Cognitive status tracking
• Condition Overview

What Is Dementia?

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), dementia is a chronic or progressive syndrome that affects memory, thinking, orientation, comprehension, learning, language, and judgment. Alzheimer's disease is the most common type, accounting for about 60-70% of cases.

Memory and Orientation Difficulties

Recent memory loss, repeated questions, getting lost in familiar places, and confusion about time.

Executive Function Decline

Difficulty planning, solving problems, and completing familiar tasks (such as cooking or managing finances).

Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms (BPSD)

Mood changes, apathy, anxiety, personality shifts, and in some cases agitation or hallucinations.

Cognitive Therapy
15 million

China has approximately 15 million people living with dementia, with prevalence around 6% among adults aged 60 and above.

Early Identification Key Warning Signs

Early diagnosis and intervention can significantly slow progress.

Memory Loss

Recent memory loss affecting daily life, such as repeated questioning of the same thing.

Planning Difficulties

It is difficult to cook according to the recipe or to process monthly bills.

Time and Space Confusion

Forget the date, forget where you are or how you get there.

Misplacing Items

Puts things in unusual places and cannot be traced back.

Recommended screening tools: MMSE (Mini-Mental State Examination) / MoCA (Montreal Cognitive Assessment)

Therapeutic Mechanisms

How music therapy engages the aging brain.

Reminiscence

Musical memory often remains relatively preserved. Familiar songs from earlier life can activate hippocampal pathways and awaken long-term memory and emotional connection.

Emotional and Behavioral Regulation

Calming music can reduce agitation and anxiety, serving as an effective non-pharmacological approach for BPSD management.

Multisensory Stimulation

Combining visual, auditory, and tactile stimulation (such as clapping to rhythm) can help maintain current motor and sensory function.

• Hearing experience

Listen. The echo of memory.

A familiar melody that awakens deep memories and tranquillity.

Light Therapy (10min)

EotoCare-C-L-025

Yoga (10min)

EotoCare-C-L-027

Moderate Therapy (10min)

EotoCare-C-M-026

Meditation (10min)

EotoCare-C-M-033

Therapy Moderate III (10min)

EotoCare-C-M-015

• Real Cases

Vision-Guided Dementia Case Library

The following cases represent mild, moderate, and severe dementia care goals, emphasizing orientation support, memory activation, and safe soothing care.

Step 1 · User Image Upload

After lunch, latte and old books.

Step 2 · AI Analysis & Intervention Strategy

Mild

Mild Dementia: Case 2

User profile:Watanabe (pseudonym), 68 years old.

Diagnostic status:Dementia / Mild.

Input image:An afternoon photo of a latte and an old book.

Image element analysis:Coffee brown and cream white tones with cup-focused composition are translated into warm Jazz-Hop textures.

Therapeutic logic:For mild-stage attention drift and reduced time orientation, familiar ambient sound and stable harmony reinforce a sense of "here and now" and support daily rhythm.

Step 3 · Generate Therapeutic Video

Step 1 · User Image Upload

Black and white film swings and leaves fall

Step 2 · AI Analysis & Intervention Strategy

Moderate

Moderate Dementia: Case 4

User profile:Takahashi (pseudonym), 74 years old.

Diagnostic status:Dementia / Moderate.

Input image:A black-and-white scene of an empty swing and fallen leaves.

Image element analysis:Low-saturation grayscale and centered negative-space composition are translated into narrative Neo-Classical structure.

Therapeutic logic:For moderate-stage anxiety and repetitive behavior, nostalgic timbre and clear musical sections support memory cueing, emotional settling, and caregiver co-regulation.

Step 3 · Generate Therapeutic Video

Step 1 · User Image Upload

The wide-angle wheat field and the wind blow the waves.

Step 2 · AI Analysis & Intervention Strategy

Severe

Severe Dementia: Case 6

User profile:Ito (pseudonym), 81 years old.

Diagnostic status:Dementia / Severe.

Input image:A wide-angle image of open wheat fields and wind-driven waves.

Image element analysis:Warm gold tones and horizontal repeating texture are translated into slow, expansive cinematic healing sound.

Therapeutic logic:For severe-stage day-night rhythm disruption and restlessness, low-intensity and low-complexity long-line melodies provide continuous soothing and stable care support.

Step 3 · Generate Therapeutic Video

Note: Case examples are for education and intervention logic illustration only and do not constitute medical diagnosis or prescription advice.

• Continuum of Care

3x3 Intervention Matrix

Adapted to caregiving needs across different stages of dementia.

Mild

Memory Maintenance

Language fill-in tasks and rhythm memory games encourage active participation to help maintain language ability and short-term memory.

MethodCognitive training
TargetSlow Functional Decline
Moderate

Emotional Connection

Reminiscence-based music reduces anxiety and wandering behavior while improving interaction with caregivers.

MethodReminiscence Therapy
TargetEmotional Stability
Severe

Sensory Comfort

Passive listening to gentle music, combined with touch-based stimulation (such as massage), can increase safety and improve sleep quality.

MethodMultisensory Stimulation
TargetComfort-Focused Care
• Caregiver Support

Caregiver Survival Guide

Caring for an older adult with dementia is a long journey. Caring for yourself is essential to sustain care for them.

  • 1

    Simplified communication

    Use one instruction at a time in short, simple sentences. Wait patiently for responses and avoid rushing.

  • 2

    Validate Rather Than Correct

    If your loved one says, "I'm going home to my mom," avoid direct correction and first respond to the emotion: "Do you miss your mom?"

  • 3

    Create a Safer Environment

    Remove trip hazards, add night lights, and install bathroom grab bars. Safety comes first.

Cognitive Care
With Love

Even when memory fades, love and feelings remain.

Protect Precious Memory