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Vibrotactile cueing using wearable computers for overcoming learned non-use in chronic stroke

Online:05 May 2013Publication History

ABSTRACT

Outpatient stroke rehabilitation is often lengthy and expensive due to patients' lack of functional use of the impaired arm outside of the clinic caused by "learned non-use." Learned non-use is detrimental to stroke recovery, often resulting in chronic disability. To overcome learned non-use, a wearable "personal assistant" solution is proposed that employs ubiquitous cueing to stimulate patient use of the paretic arm while outside of therapy sessions. A pilot user study is presented that evaluated stroke survivors' tolerance and acceptance of cueing, and the usability of the proposed implementation.

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  • Published in

    ACM Other conferences cover image
    PervasiveHealth '13: Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare
    May 2013
    483 pages
    ISBN:9781936968800

    Publisher

    ICST (Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering)

    Brussels, Belgium

    Publication History

    • Online: 5 May 2013
    • Published: 5 May 2013

    Qualifiers

    • research-article

    Acceptance Rates

    Overall Acceptance Rate 55 of 116 submissions, 47%

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