Attention under pressure
Hannah Natanson spent months fighting to protect her sources after the FBI raided her home. On Monday, she won a Pulitzer Prize.
The story is a masterclass in something we rarely discuss: attention under pressure.
Investigative journalism demands an extraordinary kind of visual and cognitive endurance. Hours of document review. Spotting patterns across thousands of pages. Maintaining focus when the stakes — and the stress — are sky-high.
Most of us aren't facing federal subpoenas. But many of us are facing something quieter: visual coordination challenges that make sustained attention feel like a battle. For individuals with amblyopia — commonly known as lazy eye — the brain has learned to favour one eye over the other, compromising depth perception and binocular vision. Everyday tasks like reading or screen work become an uphill climb.
That's where Amblyotube comes in. Developed by Seven Sportz, it's a Meta Quest app that delivers a different visual experience to each eye while you watch YouTube-style content. Built on the principle of dichoptic vision training, the software uses tools like a dominant eye shader — which applies adjustable blur, contrast, and opacity to the stronger eye — and AI-driven sharpening that identifies human figures and enhances them specifically for the lazy eye. The result is binocular training that encourages both eyes to work together, rather than patching one and leaving the other to struggle alone.
Designed for people with amblyopia, Amblyotube is recreational and educational software, not a medical device. Sessions of 30 to 40 minutes fit naturally into daily routines, and engagement stays high because you're watching content you already enjoy.
Natanson's win reminds us that focus is a skill worth training — sometimes against all odds.
Train yours: https://www.meta.com/en-gb/experiences/amblyotube/25906906972338493/
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