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In this thesis, quantitative evaluation of quality of movement during stroke rehabilitation will be discussed. Previous research on stroke rehabilitation in hospital has been shown to be effective. In this thesis, we study various issues that arise when creating a home-based system that can be deployed in a patient's home.

In this thesis, quantitative evaluation of quality of movement during stroke rehabilitation will be discussed. Previous research on stroke rehabilitation in hospital has been shown to be effective. In this thesis, we study various issues that arise when creating a home-based system that can be deployed in a patient's home. Limitation of motion capture due to reduced number of sensors leads to problems with design of kinematic features for quantitative evaluation. Also, the hierarchical three-level tasks of rehabilitation requires new design of kinematic features. In this thesis, the design of kinematic features for a home based stroke rehabilitation system will be presented. Results of the most challenging classifier are shown and proves the effectiveness of the design. Comparison between modern classification techniques and low computational cost threshold based classification with same features will also be shown.
ContributorsCheng, Long (Author) / Turaga, Pavan (Thesis advisor) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Motion capture using cost-effective sensing technology is challenging and the huge success of Microsoft Kinect has been attracting researchers to uncover the potential of using this technology into computer vision applications. In this thesis, an upper-body motion analysis in a home-based system for stroke rehabilitation using novel RGB-D camera -

Motion capture using cost-effective sensing technology is challenging and the huge success of Microsoft Kinect has been attracting researchers to uncover the potential of using this technology into computer vision applications. In this thesis, an upper-body motion analysis in a home-based system for stroke rehabilitation using novel RGB-D camera - Kinect is presented. We address this problem by first conducting a systematic analysis of the usability of Kinect for motion analysis in stroke rehabilitation. Then a hybrid upper body tracking approach is proposed which combines off-the-shelf skeleton tracking with a novel depth-fused mean shift tracking method. We proposed several kinematic features reliably extracted from the proposed inexpensive and portable motion capture system and classifiers that correlate torso movement to clinical measures of unimpaired and impaired. Experiment results show that the proposed sensing and analysis works reliably on measuring torso movement quality and is promising for end-point tracking. The system is currently being deployed for large-scale evaluations.
ContributorsDu, Tingfang (Author) / Turaga, Pavan (Thesis advisor) / Spanias, Andreas (Committee member) / Rikakis, Thanassis (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012