top of page
Home
About
My Vision
The Hub
Our Team
Research
Spinal Cord Injury Research
Chronic Pain Research
Global Avatar Project
Clinical Trials
VRWalk
The Restore Trial
tRESTORE Trial
The StoPain Trial
Chronic Pain Emotional Recovery
The Eye-Pain Trial
Media & News
In the Press
Videos
Publications
Donate
Contact
More
Use tab to navigate through the menu items.
In The Press
!
Widget Didn’t Load
Check your internet and refresh this page.
If that doesn’t work, contact us.
In the Press
Videos
Videos
Discover more about our research
All Categories
Play Video
Play Video
04:23
Neuro Recovery Research Hub
NeuroRecovery Research Hub
Welcome to the Neuro Recovery Research Hub, a new research facility led by Professor Sylvia Gustin at the University of New South Wales in Australia.
Play Video
Play Video
02:48
NeuroRecovery Research Hub
Research Call Out
The NeuroRecovery Research Hub is located at UNSW Sydney (University of New South Wales). The Hub brings together a multi-disciplinary team of passionate researchers aiming to effectively treat these conditions using cutting-edge science research methods and novel technology-based interventions.
Play Video
Play Video
00:51
NeuroRecovery Research
UNSW Impact Story - Project Avatar
Play Video
Play Video
02:28
NeuroRecovery Research Hub
Professor Sylvia Gustin Vision
Meet Professor Sylvia Gustin head of the NeuroRecovery Research Hub.
Play Video
Play Video
02:23
NeuroRecovery Research hub
Clinical Trials
Over the next five (5) years The Neuro Recovery Research hub is running clinical trials in collaboration with the US Dep. of Defence spinal cord injury program, Wings for Life, NHMRC (National Health Medical Research Council), MRFF (Medical Research Future Fund), and NSW Health to support innovation in neuro recovery research.
Play Video
Play Video
06:50
NeuroRecovery Research Hub
Global Avatar Project
The NeuroRecovery Research hub is working in partnership with NSW Health and Immersive Experience Laboratories in America to trial an innovative program that has been in development over the last three (3) years called The Avatar Program. Research has shown that 50% of complete spinal cord injury people who cannot feel, still have messages going through to the brain. The program aims to retrain the brain to identify, understand and act to messages being received.
Play Video
Play Video
03:14
NeuroRecovery Research Hub
Improving the lives of people with Chronic Pain
Chronic pain is more than a painful experience, it is highly emotional. Our research group has discovered for the first time that ongoing pain decreases the content of the brain’s neurotransmitters Glutamate and GABA in the area of the brain responsible for processing emotion. Watch to learn about two programs being developed to improve the emotional and sensory elements of chronic pain.
bottom of page