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A virtual tabletop workspace for upper-limb rehabilitation in Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI): A multiple case study evaluation

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-30, 19:15 authored by Nicholas Mumford, Jonathan Duckworth, Ross Eldridge, Mark Guglielmetti, Patrick Thomas, Heiko Rudolph, Peter Wilson
Deficits in upper limb function are common among patients with Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). Accordingly, new technologies, such as virtual reality (VR), are being developed to further upper limb rehabilitation. The study described here successfully trialed a table-top VR-based system (called Elements). Two patients with TBI participated in case-studies using a multiple-baseline, AB time-sequence design; the intervention consisted of 12 1-hour sessions. Performance was measured on both system-rated measures and standardized tests of functional skill. Time-sequence plots for each patient were first sight inspected for trends; this was followed by split-middle trend analysis. Participants demonstrated significant improvements in their movement accuracy, efficiency, and bimanual dexterity; and mixed improvement on speed and other measures of movement skill. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that the Elements system facilitated motor learning in both TBI patients. Larger scale clinical trials are now deemed a viable step in further validating the system.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1109/ICVR.2008.4625156
  2. 2.
    ISBN - Is published in 9781424427017 (urn:isbn:9781424427017)

Start page

175

End page

180

Total pages

6

Outlet

Proceedings of the Annual Conference on Virtual Rehabilitation 2008

Editors

G. Burdea

Name of conference

Virtual Rehabilitation 2008

Publisher

IEEE

Place published

USA

Start date

2008-08-25

End date

2008-08-27

Language

English

Copyright

©2008 IEEE

Former Identifier

2006008418

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-09-18

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