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Innovative Power Wheelchair Control Interface: A Proof-of-Concept Study
Author(s) -
Sandra Winkler,
Sergio Romero,
Emily Prather,
Marisa Ramroop,
Emmy Slaibe,
Matthew Christensen
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
american journal of occupational therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.646
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1943-7676
pISSN - 0272-9490
DOI - 10.5014/ajot.2016.015750
Subject(s) - wheelchair , joystick , intervention (counseling) , control (management) , physical medicine and rehabilitation , interface (matter) , power (physics) , personal mobility , descriptive statistics , physical therapy , frame (networking) , computer science , psychology , medicine , applied psychology , simulation , nursing , artificial intelligence , mathematics , computer network , telecommunications , statistics , physics , bubble , quantum mechanics , maximum bubble pressure method , parallel computing , world wide web
Some people without independent mobility are candidates for powered mobility but are unable to use a traditional power wheelchair joystick. This proof-of-concept study tested and further developed an innovative method of driving power wheelchairs for people whose impairments prevent them from operating commercial wheelchair controls. Our concept, Self-referenced Personal Orthotic Omni-purpose Control Interface (SPOOCI), is distinguished by referencing the control sensor not to the wheelchair frame but instead to the adjacent proximal lower-extremity segment via a custom-formed orthosis. Using a descriptive case-series design, we compared the pre-post functional power wheelchair driving skill data of 4 participants, measured by the Power Mobility Program, using descriptive analyses. The intervention consisted of standard-care power wheelchair training during 12 outpatient occupational or physical therapy sessions. All 4 participants who completed the 12-wk intervention improved their functional power wheelchair driving skills using SPOOCI, but only 3 were deemed safe to continue with power wheelchair driving.

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