The Neuro-Rehabilitation Research Center of Kio University has started to produce and publish contents that convey the research results so far in an easy-to-understand manner with videos.
According to Associate Professor Tomohiro Osumi of the Neurorehabilitation Research Center, the lecture video began to be distributed in 2015. When I was able to watch 10 lectures for free with the content of "Brain structure and function that can be understood in 9 minutes", the number of viewers increased sharply during the stay home period. As of November 2021, 11, it has been viewed about 22 times and has attracted a large number of viewers with 40 subscribers.
Therefore, we decided to introduce the research results published as "PRESS RELEASE" on the university homepage with video contents.The title is "Research on Neuroreha in 3 Minutes".I tried to convey the research results in an easy-to-understand manner by incorporating the state of the experiment that there was a limit in the text.
The video does not rely on professional narrators or graphical presentations, but the researcher who conducted the research himself talks while presenting the video of the experiment and the graph of the result.It is said that some students are interested in graduate school after seeing this content, probably because they feel familiar with the episodes such as the motivation that led to the research and the atmosphere during the experiment.
Associate Professor Ozumi commented on this initiative, saying, "The members of this research center are interested in many things and are doing a wide range of research in a good way. Since they are doing a wide range of interesting research, that is more broad. I hope it will be communicated. "In the future, by increasing the content, the number of viewers will increase, the number of colleagues who will carry out research together will increase, and even better research will be possible, with the aim of contributing to society, especially in the field of rehabilitation.
reference:[YouTube] Kio University Neurorehabilitation Research Center