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1.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2022: 1-6, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36176163

RESUMO

There is a growing need to deliver rehabilitation care to patients remotely. Long term demographic changes, geographic shortages of care providers, and now a global pandemic contribute to this need. Telepresence provides an option for delivering this care. However, telepresence using video and audio alone does not provide an interaction of the same quality as in-person. To bridge this gap, we propose the use of social robot augmented telepresence (SRAT). We have constructed a demonstration SRAT system for upper extremity rehab, in which a humanoid, with a head, body, face, and arms, is attached to a mobile telepresence system, to collaborate with the patient and clinicians as an independent social entity. The humanoid can play games with the patient and demonstrate activities. These activities could be used to perform assessments in support of self-directed rehab and to perform exercises.In this paper, we present a case series with six subjects who completed interactions with the robot, three subjects who have previously suffered a stroke and three pediatric subjects who are typically developing. Subjects performed a Simon Says activity and a target touch activity in person, using classical telepresence (CT), and using SRAT. Subjects were able to effectively work with the social robot guiding interactions and 5 of 6 rated SRAT better than CT. This study demonstrates the feasibility of SRAT and some of its benefits.


Assuntos
Robótica , Acidente Vascular Cerebral , Telerreabilitação , Criança , Estudos de Viabilidade , Humanos , Interação Social
2.
J Rehabil Assist Technol Eng ; 8: 20556683211001805, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33953938

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: We present Lil'Flo, a socially assistive robotic telerehabilitation system for deployment in the community. As shortages in rehabilitation professionals increase, especially in rural areas, there is a growing need to deliver care in the communities where patients live, work, learn, and play. Traditional telepresence, while useful, fails to deliver the rich interactions and data needed for motor rehabilitation and assessment. METHODS: We designed Lil'Flo, targeted towards pediatric patients with cerebral palsy and brachial plexus injuries using results from prior usability studies. The system combines traditional telepresence and computer vision with a humanoid, who can play games with patients and guide them in a present and engaging way under the supervision of a remote clinician. We surveyed 13 rehabilitation clinicians in a virtual usability test to evaluate the system. RESULTS: The system is more portable, extensible, and cheaper than our prior iteration, with an expressive humanoid. The virtual usability testing shows that clinicians believe Lil'Flo could be deployed in rural and elder care facilities and is more capable of remote stretching, strength building, and motor assessments than traditional video only telepresence. CONCLUSIONS: Lil'Flo represents a novel approach to delivering rehabilitation care in the community while maintaining the clinician-patient connection.

3.
IEEE Robot Autom Lett ; 6(2): 2946-2953, 2021 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33748417

RESUMO

With the shortage of rehabilitation clinicians in rural areas and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, remote rehabilitation (telerehab) fills an important gap in access to rehabilitation, especially for the treatment of adults and children experiencing upper arm disability due to stroke and cerebral palsy. We propose the use of a socially assistive robot with arms, a torso, and a face to play games with and guide patients, coupled with a telepresence platform, to maintain the patient-clinician interaction, and a computer vision system, to aid in automated objective assessments, as a tool for achieving more effective telerehab. In this paper, we outline the design of such a system, Lil'Flo, and present a uniquely large perceived usefulness evaluation of the Lil'Flo platform with 351 practicing therapists in the United States. We analyzed responses to the question of general interest and 5 questions on Lil'Flo's perceived usefulness. Therapists believe that Lil'Flo would significantly improve communication, motivation, and compliance during telerehab interactions when compared to traditional telepresence. 27% of therapists reported that they were interested in using Lil'Flo. Therapists interested in using Lil'Flo perceived it as having significantly higher usefulness across all measured dimensions than those who were not interested in using it.

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