Call Us Today

WE HAVE REOPENED AND HAVE RESUMED OUR NORMAL BUSINESS HOURS.
PLEASE CALL 920-722-2020 TO SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT.

Welcome to A B See Vision Therapy Center, S.C.

Call us at 920-722-2020 today.

Vision Therapy

A B See Vision Therapy Center, S.C. maintains a strong commitment to enhancing functional vision. Our program is a comprehensive individualized vision therapy program which focuses on improvements in brain function as it relates to vision.

We treat both children and adults who lack the visual skills to be as successful in life as they would like to be. Vision Therapy is a progressive program of visual activities, prescribed and performed under a doctor’s supervision, designed to improve visual skills and abilities for visual comfort, efficiency and improvement in processing and interpreting visual information.

Vision is a set of skills and abilities of which 20/20 eyesight is only one. Other necessary visual skills for us to be successful include: eye-teaming, focusing, eye movements, visual perception, visual information processing, and integration of vision with our other senses.


We treat both children and adults who lack the visual skills to be as successful in life as they would like to be. A B See focuses on three main areas: learning-related vision problems, sports vision enhancement, and vision rehabilitation after acquired brain injury.


Dr. Linda Dejmek
Neuro-Developmental Optometrist | A B See Vision Therapy Center, S.C. | 920-722-2020

1401 McMahon Dr.
Suite 100
Neenah, WI 54956

Office Hours

Monday:

3:00 pm-6:00 pm

Tuesday:

8:00 am-6:00 pm

Wednesday:

1:00 pm-6:00 pm

Thursday:

8:00 am-6:00 pm

Friday:

Closed

Saturday:

Closed

Sunday:

Closed

Meet the Neuro-Optometrist

  • Meet The Neuro-Optometrist

    Dr. Dejmek completed her undergraduate work at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and received her Doctor of Optometry degree from Indiana University in Bloomington. She is the founder and owner of A B See Vision Therapy Center in Menasha, Wisconsin and owner of the Appleton Eye Clinic in Appleton, Wisconsin, in which she has been practicing primary care optometry since 1978.

    Read More

Community

Community Content

Testimonial

  • "While working as an Occupational Therapist, I have seen the significant role that vision can play in balance, gait, and movement."
    Wendy Effa, OTR Occupational Therapist, Neenah, WI

Featured Articles

Read up on informative topics

  • Saccadic Fixators

    This entails a wall-mounted square board with a starburst design. Along the various striations of the starburst are lighted buttons. As the buttons light up, the patient works quickly to see how many of these lit buttons they can push before they go out. The key is to keep the head still. Peripheral ...

    Read More
  • Patches

    Eye patches are used to strengthen muscle control in weak eyes. By placing a patch over the strong eye, the weaker eye is forced to do the heavy lifting. While it may be uncomfortable for the patient at first, the muscle controlling the weaker eye will become tougher and more resilient. This will allow ...

    Read More
  • Rotation Trainers

    Rotation trainers consist of a disk – with various designs – that is attached to a rod-like base. As the disk rotates, the patient is asked to perform tasks that are designed to test and enhance eye-hand coordination, space awareness, perceptual awareness and visual acuity. ...

    Read More
  • Computer Software

    Computer aided vision therapy consists of a software package designed to enhance eye tracking skills, visual thinking, processing skills and binocular vision skills. Eye teaming, focusing and tracking are not optical in nature, and problems in these areas are the result of poor eye muscles. Specialized ...

    Read More
  • Prisms

    A prism has the same cross-section across the entire length of its shape. When used in eyeglasses, they often correct abnormalities associated with nearsightedness, farsightedness and double vision. Eyeglasses, or corrective lenses, reduce or increase the size of the image based on the eyes’ ability ...

    Read More
  • Dry Eye

    Sometimes your eyes don’t make enough tears or the tears evaporate too fast because they don’t have the right amount of compounds in them. This is called dry eye. Up to 5% of Americans complain of some form of dry eye. Individuals who wear contact lenses or have undergone LASIK or other types of ...

    Read More
  • Wandering Eye

    A wandering eye is a type of eye condition known as strabismus or tropia, and it may be caused by damage to the retina or muscles that control the eye, stroke or brain injury, or an uncorrected refractive error like farsightedness. With a wandering eye, one eye deviates or wanders in a different direction ...

    Read More
  • Reading and Writing

    For many adults, reading and writing come so naturally that they seem almost effortless. However, reading and writing are actually complicated skills that take significant effort to learn. For example, reading involves recognizing letters, associating letter combinations with their corresponding sounds, ...

    Read More
  • Lazy Eye

    Lazy eye, also referred to as amblyopia, is a condition that develops in infancy or early childhood, and it typically starts when the focus in one eye is more enhanced than the other. The eye with less focus might be impaired due to a significant amount of farsightedness or astigmatism, or something ...

    Read More
  • Dyslexia

    Dyslexia When a child has difficulty reading due to problems recognizing speech sounds and learning how they connect to words and letters, the condition is known as dyslexia, a learning disorder caused by genetic traits that disturb how the brain works. It affects areas of the brain dealing with language ...

    Read More

Newsletter Signup

Sign up for more articles