Nicosia: Chief Scientist Demetris Skourides held an introductory visit to SOZO Brain Center to review the organisation’s research activities, clinical practices, and international collaborations in the field of neuromodulation and AI-enabled medicine.
According to Cyprus News Agency, Skourides was hosted by SOZO CEO Matthew Papadopoulos and brain.space CEO Yair Levy, and had the opportunity to view a live demonstration of the ‘Brain Sensei’ AI-powered neurotechnology helmet. During the demonstration, the Chief Scientist experienced how real-time neurophysiological data is collected, analysed, and transformed into actionable insights for clinicians, adhering to GDPR and privacy laws.
The Center also briefed Skourides on its medical training programmes. To date, over 150 doctors from 14 countries have been trained in SOZO’s neuromodulation protocols. More than 60 clinicians have become certified SOZO Fellows, actively applying these therapies in their own practices. Collectively, this network has treated more than 3,500 patients worldwide.
Following the visit, Chief Scientist Demetris Skourides said that ‘it is exciting to see how artificial intelligence is being used in healthcare here in Cyprus. SOZO’s commitment to developing technologies such as Agentic AI within medical protocols, and the broader investment by Cypriot innovation companies in building strong R and D capabilities, reflect the ambition of Cyprus’ national Research and Development Strategy 2024-2026.’
SOZO Brain Center CEO Matthew Papadopoulos added that SOZO is ‘advancing a first-of-its-kind agentic AI platform with brain.space, creating global standards in neuromodulation, and building an international network of trained physicians who are already transforming patient care.’