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Rehabilitation centred design

Published: 10 April 2010 Publication History
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  • Abstract

    Stroke is a significant cause of disability, and is predicted to become a greater burden as population demographics shift. Research suggests that the completion of rehabilitation exercises can considerably improve function in damaged limbs, yet these exercises can be both boring and frustrating for patients to complete at home. New technologies create possibilities to support rehabilitation in motivating and entertaining ways, and, in this paper, we present a case study that illustrates the work of designing such technologies for a single user. Participation in this case study has highlighted some interesting tensions between designing for rehabilitation and designing for the user.

    References

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    Ma, H., C. Trombly, and C. Robinson-Podolski, The Effect of Context on Skill Acquisition and Transfer. AJOT, 1999. 53(2): p. 138--144.
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    Millan, M. and A. Davalos, The Need for New Therapies for Acute Ischemic Stroke. Cerebrovasc Dis 2006. 22 (Suppl 1): p. 3--9.
    [3]
    Pridmore, T., et al., Mixed Reality Environments in Stroke Rehabilitation: Interfaces across the Real/Virtual Divide Int J Disabil Hum Dev, 2007. 6(1): p. 3--10.
    [4]
    Ryan, R. and E. Deci, Self-Determination Theory and the Facilitation of Intrinsic Motivation, Social Development, and Well Being. American Psychologist, 2000. 55(1): p. 68--78.

    Cited By

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    • (2023)Optimized Home Rehabilitation Technology Reduces Upper Extremity Impairment Compared to a Conventional Home Exercise Program: A Randomized, Controlled, Single-Blind Trial in Subacute StrokeNeurorehabilitation and Neural Repair10.1177/1545968322114699537:1(53-65)Online publication date: 12-Jan-2023
    • (2023)Exploring the Barriers and Potential Opportunities of Technology Integration in Community-based Social Service OrganizationsACM Journal on Computing and Sustainable Societies10.1145/3610720Online publication date: 4-Aug-2023
    • (2021)Homes of Stroke Survivors Are a Challenging Environment for Rehabilitation TechnologiesJMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies10.2196/120298:2(e12029)Online publication date: 17-Jun-2021
    • Show More Cited By

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    Published In

    cover image ACM Conferences
    CHI EA '10: CHI '10 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 2010
    2219 pages
    ISBN:9781605589305
    DOI:10.1145/1753846

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 10 April 2010

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    Author Tags

    1. motivation
    2. rehabilitation technologies
    3. rehabilitation-centred design
    4. stroke

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    CHI EA '10 Paper Acceptance Rate 350 of 1,346 submissions, 26%;
    Overall Acceptance Rate 6,164 of 23,696 submissions, 26%

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    Cited By

    View all
    • (2023)Optimized Home Rehabilitation Technology Reduces Upper Extremity Impairment Compared to a Conventional Home Exercise Program: A Randomized, Controlled, Single-Blind Trial in Subacute StrokeNeurorehabilitation and Neural Repair10.1177/1545968322114699537:1(53-65)Online publication date: 12-Jan-2023
    • (2023)Exploring the Barriers and Potential Opportunities of Technology Integration in Community-based Social Service OrganizationsACM Journal on Computing and Sustainable Societies10.1145/3610720Online publication date: 4-Aug-2023
    • (2021)Homes of Stroke Survivors Are a Challenging Environment for Rehabilitation TechnologiesJMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies10.2196/120298:2(e12029)Online publication date: 17-Jun-2021
    • (2019)(How) Can an App Support Physiotherapy for Frozen Shoulder Patients?Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 201910.1007/978-3-030-29381-9_11(163-183)Online publication date: 23-Aug-2019
    • (2018)Behavioral Archetypes for Stroke Rehabilitation TechnologiesHCI International 2018 – Posters' Extended Abstracts10.1007/978-3-319-92279-9_2(10-16)Online publication date: 7-Jun-2018
    • (2018)A Framework for Home-Based Stroke Rehabilitation Using Interactive Games and Augmented Reality FeedbackConverging Clinical and Engineering Research on Neurorehabilitation III10.1007/978-3-030-01845-0_50(252-255)Online publication date: 16-Oct-2018
    • (2017)Exploring in-hospital rehabilitation exercises for stroke patientsProceedings of the 29th Australian Conference on Computer-Human Interaction10.1145/3152771.3152796(228-237)Online publication date: 28-Nov-2017
    • (2017)An interactive 3D health app with multimodal information representation for frozen shoulderProceedings of the 19th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services10.1145/3098279.3098562(1-11)Online publication date: 4-Sep-2017
    • (2017)UPPERCARE: A community aware environment for post-surgical musculoskeletal recovery of elderly patients2017 IEEE 21st International Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work in Design (CSCWD)10.1109/CSCWD.2017.8066703(251-256)Online publication date: Apr-2017
    • (2017)An Adaptive Interface Design (AID) for enhanced computer accessibility and rehabilitationInternational Journal of Human-Computer Studies10.1016/j.ijhcs.2016.09.01298(14-23)Online publication date: Feb-2017
    • Show More Cited By

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