Overview
- Appearing on Raj Shamani’s podcast, Goyal wore a small sensor near his temple that he says continuously measures cerebral blood flow, describing its readings as akin to a “miniaturised” MRI.
- Goyal links the device to his Gravity Ageing Hypothesis and says it is being developed under his Eternal and Continue Research initiatives as a research tool rather than a Zomato product.
- NDTV and Mint report he has announced a $25 million personal commitment to support the aging and health research behind the project.
- Reporters note the concept aligns with research techniques such as functional near‑infrared spectroscopy and diffuse correlation methods that estimate brain perfusion but are largely confined to academic or clinical studies.
- Specialists caution that monitoring cerebral blood flow does not prove anti‑ageing effects and say the team will need peer‑reviewed methods, independent trials, and regulatory filings before clinical or commercial use.