01 · The Goal

Bring back movement after spinal injury — by reawakening what survives

The goal is to bring back voluntary movement after spinal-cord injury — by reawakening the nerve circuits that survive an injury and driving recovery through intensive rehabilitation — pursued honestly, alongside the harder frontier of regrowing the cord itself.

02 · Why It Matters

After many spinal-cord injuries, some nerve circuitry below the injury survives but falls silent, disconnected from the brain’s commands. The remarkable finding of recent years is that this dormant circuitry can sometimes be reawakened — and paired with intensive, activity-based rehabilitation, people have regained movement once thought permanently lost. Restoring movement this way is the clinically-grounded companion to spinal-cord regeneration, and we are careful never to overstate it.

03 · What We’re Trying to Achieve

We are building the capability to reactivate surviving spinal circuits and drive recovery: harnessing the nervous system’s plasticity through targeted rehabilitation, retraining the connections that remain, and combining these with emerging approaches to restore voluntary movement.

04 · How It Works

Reawakening what survives

Reawakening dormant circuits Clinical results

Targeted approaches that reactivate surviving spinal circuitry, paired with intensive rehabilitation, have helped people recover voluntary movement after serious injury.

Activity-based rehabilitation Demonstrated — clinical

Intensive, repetitive, activity-based rehabilitation harnesses neuroplasticity to retrain movement and produces real functional gains.

Retraining the nervous system Demonstrated

The spinal cord and brain can relearn control of movement through repeated, structured practice — the nervous system’s plasticity at work.

Combining with repair Frontier

Pairing circuit reactivation and rehabilitation with biological repair (spinal-cord regeneration) aims at fuller recovery — still frontier.

05 · Who’s Building It

Cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers.

Universities & institutes

Academic spinal-cord-injury, neurorehabilitation, and neural-engineering research centers.

Government & programs

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS, NIH) · Department of Defense spinal-injury research · ARPA-H.

Enabling science base

neuroplasticity · activity-based rehabilitation · spinal circuit reactivation · motor-learning science.

06 · Technologies

The technologies: activity-based rehabilitation that drives motor recovery; neuroplasticity science that explains how circuits relearn; targeted neural stimulation approaches that help reawaken dormant circuitry; and the motor-learning principles that structure effective retraining.

07 · Breakthroughs

Voluntary movement restored Clinical results

Reactivating surviving circuits with intensive rehabilitation has restored voluntary movement in people with serious spinal injury.

Rehabilitation drives recovery Demonstrated — clinical

Activity-based rehabilitation produces genuine, measurable functional gains by harnessing neuroplasticity.

Relearning movement Demonstrated

Structured, repetitive practice helps the nervous system relearn control of movement.

Fuller recovery with repair Frontier

Combining reactivation with biological cord repair is an active frontier.

08 · Remaining Challenges

The honest challenges, stated plainly: these approaches work by reawakening circuitry that survives — they cannot restore a fully severed cord, and outcomes vary widely with the injury. Recovery often requires enormous, sustained rehabilitation and may be partial. And true regrowth of the cord remains a separate, hard frontier. What is real: reactivation-plus-rehabilitation recovery. What is frontier: restoring function where the cord is fully severed. We hold that line firmly.

09 · Mature Capability

The future, fully built

A person paralyzed by spinal injury — where circuitry survives — is helped to move again: dormant circuits reawakened, the nervous system retrained through rehabilitation, voluntary movement recovered. Movement becomes something we work to restore, honestly, alongside the harder work of regrowing the cord.

Honest boundary: reactivating surviving circuits with rehabilitation has restored some voluntary movement in people; it cannot restore a fully severed cord, and outcomes vary. We will never overstate it. AI supports human clinicians; it never replaces them.
10 · Evidence Vault

The proof, for this capability

Cited as evidence the capability is real, not as partners or endorsers.

Circuit reactivation + rehabilitation

Reawakening surviving spinal circuits with intensive rehabilitation has restored voluntary movement in people with serious injury. Stage: Clinical results.

Activity-based rehabilitation

Produces real, measurable functional gains via neuroplasticity. Stage: Demonstrated (clinical).

Combining with biological repair

Pairing reactivation with cord regeneration for fuller recovery is frontier. Stage: Frontier.

Honest framing

Real organizations and studies are cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers. These approaches reawaken surviving circuitry; they cannot restore a fully severed cord, and we do not claim otherwise.

Help build this future

Every signature grows the movement to make movement recovery real — honestly — and free at the point of need.

Paid for by Michael Floyd for President.

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