Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke
abstract: Millions of Americans live with motor impairments resulting from a stroke and the best way to administer rehabilitative therapy to achieve recovery is not well understood. Adaptive mixed reality rehabilitation (AMRR) is a novel integration of motion capture technology and high-level media...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-159652018-06-22T03:03:34Z Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke abstract: Millions of Americans live with motor impairments resulting from a stroke and the best way to administer rehabilitative therapy to achieve recovery is not well understood. Adaptive mixed reality rehabilitation (AMRR) is a novel integration of motion capture technology and high-level media computing that provides precise kinematic measurements and engaging multimodal feedback for self-assessment during a therapeutic task. The AMRR system was evaluated in a small (N=3) cohort of stroke survivors to determine best practices for administering adaptive, media-based therapy. A proof of concept study followed, examining changes in clinical scale and kinematic performances among a group of stroke survivors who received either a month of AMRR therapy (N = 11) or matched dosing of traditional repetitive task therapy (N = 10). Both groups demonstrated statistically significant improvements in Wolf Motor Function Test and upper-extremity Fugl-Meyer Assessment scores, indicating increased function after the therapy. However, only participants who received AMRR therapy showed a consistent improvement in their kinematic measurements, including those measured in the trained reaching task (reaching to grasp a cone) and in an untrained reaching task (reaching to push a lighted button). These results suggest that that the AMRR system can be used as a therapy tool to enhance both functionality and reaching kinematics that quantify movement quality. Additionally, the AMRR concepts are currently being transitioned to a home-based training application. An inexpensive, easy-to-use, toolkit of tangible objects has been developed to sense, assess and provide feedback on hand function during different functional activities. These objects have been shown to accurately and consistently track hand function in people with unimpaired movements and will be tested with stroke survivors in the future. Dissertation/Thesis Duff, Margaret Rose (Author) Rikakis, Thanassis (Advisor) He, Jiping (Advisor) Herman, Richard (Committee member) Kleim, Jeffrey (Committee member) Santos, Veronica (Committee member) Towe, Bruce (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Biomedical engineering Kinematics Mixed Reality Rehabilitation Engineering Sensor Integration Stroke Rehabilitation eng 178 pages Ph.D. Bioengineering 2012 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.15965 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2012 |
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English |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Biomedical engineering Kinematics Mixed Reality Rehabilitation Engineering Sensor Integration Stroke Rehabilitation |
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Biomedical engineering Kinematics Mixed Reality Rehabilitation Engineering Sensor Integration Stroke Rehabilitation Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke |
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abstract: Millions of Americans live with motor impairments resulting from a stroke and the best way to administer rehabilitative therapy to achieve recovery is not well understood. Adaptive mixed reality rehabilitation (AMRR) is a novel integration of motion capture technology and high-level media computing that provides precise kinematic measurements and engaging multimodal feedback for self-assessment during a therapeutic task. The AMRR system was evaluated in a small (N=3) cohort of stroke survivors to determine best practices for administering adaptive, media-based therapy. A proof of concept study followed, examining changes in clinical scale and kinematic performances among a group of stroke survivors who received either a month of AMRR therapy (N = 11) or matched dosing of traditional repetitive task therapy (N = 10). Both groups demonstrated statistically significant improvements in Wolf Motor Function Test and upper-extremity Fugl-Meyer Assessment scores, indicating increased function after the therapy. However, only participants who received AMRR therapy showed a consistent improvement in their kinematic measurements, including those measured in the trained reaching task (reaching to grasp a cone) and in an untrained reaching task (reaching to push a lighted button). These results suggest that that the AMRR system can be used as a therapy tool to enhance both functionality and reaching kinematics that quantify movement quality. Additionally, the AMRR concepts are currently being transitioned to a home-based training application. An inexpensive, easy-to-use, toolkit of tangible objects has been developed to sense, assess and provide feedback on hand function during different functional activities. These objects have been shown to accurately and consistently track hand function in people with unimpaired movements and will be tested with stroke survivors in the future. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Bioengineering 2012 |
author2 |
Duff, Margaret Rose (Author) |
author_facet |
Duff, Margaret Rose (Author) |
title |
Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke |
title_short |
Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke |
title_full |
Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke |
title_fullStr |
Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke |
title_full_unstemmed |
Adaptive Mixed Reality Rehabilitation for Stroke |
title_sort |
adaptive mixed reality rehabilitation for stroke |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.15965 |
_version_ |
1718699922918735872 |