Usability study of wearable inertial sensors for exergames (WISE) for movement assessment and exercise


This research is led by Vikram Kapila, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. Principal authors are Ph.D. students Ashwin Rajkumar, Master's students Fabio Vulpi and Satish Reddy Bethi, and Preeti Raghavan of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Rusk Rehabilitation at NYU School of Medicince.

Recent years have seen a brisk rise in development and deployment of digital health systems using such technologies as wearable sensors and embedded controllers to enhance access to medical diagnostics and treatments. Because of an accelerating trend in the number of stroke survivors requiring rehabilitation, healthcare services worldwide are considering technological solutions to enhance accessibility to assessment and treatment, particularly during the past year’s period of enforced quarantine due to COVID-19. 

Some of the challenges faced by these technologies are clinical acceptance, high equipment cost, accuracy, and ease of use. 

To address these limitations, the researchers designed wearable inertial sensors for exergames (WISE), a system that includes an animated virtual coach to deliver instruction, and a subject- model whose movements are animated by real-time sensor measurements from the WISE system worn by a subject. The paper examines the WISE system’s accuracy and usability for the assessment of upper limb range of motion (ROM). 

The system uses five wearable sensor modules affixed to a user’s upper body: above the wrist on the left and right forearms, above the elbow on the left and right arms, and on the back. Each WISE sensor module consists of a sensor interfaced with a microcontroller soldered to a printed circuit board, which is connected to a lithium-ion battery. A storage and calibration cube is designed and 3D-printed to house the five WISE system modules and simultaneously calibrate all the sensors prior to placement on a subject. The microcontroller retrieves absolute orientation measurement from the sensor and wirelessly streams it to a computer. The investigators used a Unity3D-based exergame interface to animate the sensor data into a 3D-human model.

Seventeen neurologically intact subjects were recruited to participate in a usability study of the WISE system. The subjects performed a series of shoulder and elbow exercises for each arm instructed by the animated virtual coach; accuracy of the ROM measurements obtained with the WISE system were compared with those obtained with a system using the Microsoft Kinect markerless motion capture system (a platform used for exergames and often tested for rehabilitation capabilities). The results suggest the WISE system performs as well as Kinect.  

The researchers plan future studies with patient populations in clinical and tele-rehabilitation settings.

This work is supported in part by the National Science Foundation DRK-12 Grant DRL-1417769, RET Site Grant EEC-1542286, and ITEST Grant DRL-1614085; NY Space Grant Consortium Grant 48240-7887; and Translation of Rehabilitation Engineering Advances and Technology (TREAT) grant NIH P2CHD086841.