NeuroInfiniti

The Atlas Project

Collecting the largest dataset in stress physiology in chiropractic.

Why this data matters

Clinical pattern recognition builds a framework. But “from everything we can observe so far” is the beginning of a scientific argument, not the end of one.

The Atlas Project is how we finish that argument. A multi-site, longitudinal data collection effort involving a group of neurologically-focused chiropractors who have committed to collecting stress response evaluation data under standardized conditions, using standardized protocols, and submitting de-identified results to the centralized Atlas dataset.

The goal is specific: to collect the largest dataset in stress physiology in chiropractic — allowing us to say, with the precision science requires, what a healthy nervous system looks like — and what a dysregulated one looks like — across age, sex, and presenting complaint.

How clinics participate

1

Run Stress Response Evaluations

Clinics conduct Stress Response Evaluations using the NeuroInfiniti instrument under standardized protocols.

2

De-Identified Data Sent Securely

Scan data is stripped of patient identity and transmitted securely to the Atlas database. No patient identity is ever transmitted.

3

Data Joins the Nervous System Atlas

Each contribution strengthens the normative dataset, building population benchmarks across demographics.

What contributing clinics receive

Population Benchmarks

Compare your patient data against the growing normative dataset.

Insights into Patient Patterns

See common stress response patterns and nervous system recovery profiles.

Early Access to New Reports

Contributing clinics receive priority access to new Neural Intelligence features as they develop.

Contributing to the Evidence Base

Your scans join the largest dataset in stress physiology in chiropractic — building the evidence base the profession deserves.

Research context

Developed in collaboration with a select group of neurologically-focused chiropractors actively testing and refining the framework in clinical practice.

Validated through an active, multi-site clinical research network collecting the largest dataset in stress physiology in chiropractic.

Next-generation assessment hardware is currently in clinical evaluation. Details forthcoming.

The nervous system has been waiting for this.