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Wii your health: a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Wii your health: a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender. / Tsekleves, Emmanouil; Skordoulis, Donysios; Paraskevopoulos, Ioannis et al.
Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011). ed. / C. Baumgartner. Vol. 723 ACTA Press, 2011. p. 502-509.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Tsekleves, E, Skordoulis, D, Paraskevopoulos, I & Kilbride, C 2011, Wii your health: a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender. in C Baumgartner (ed.), Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011). vol. 723, ACTA Press, pp. 502-509. https://doi.org/10.2316/P.2011.723-058

APA

Tsekleves, E., Skordoulis, D., Paraskevopoulos, I., & Kilbride, C. (2011). Wii your health: a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender. In C. Baumgartner (Ed.), Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011) (Vol. 723, pp. 502-509). ACTA Press. https://doi.org/10.2316/P.2011.723-058

Vancouver

Tsekleves E, Skordoulis D, Paraskevopoulos I, Kilbride C. Wii your health: a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender. In Baumgartner C, editor, Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011). Vol. 723. ACTA Press. 2011. p. 502-509 doi: 10.2316/P.2011.723-058

Author

Tsekleves, Emmanouil ; Skordoulis, Donysios ; Paraskevopoulos, Ioannis et al. / Wii your health : a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender. Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011). editor / C. Baumgartner. Vol. 723 ACTA Press, 2011. pp. 502-509

Bibtex

@inproceedings{506b0dec7b274e39ad46babda7ab4f90,
title = "Wii your health: a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender",
abstract = "Full body motion capture via the Wiimote and the new Wii MotionPlus sensor has yet to be investigated or developed. In addition, the mapping of the Wiimote-captured motion data to a computer generated 3D model inside an open source professional 3D animation tool has yet to be attempted. Within this paper the authors initiate a new study into full markerless human body motion tracking for physical rehabilitation. In particular, it includes the investigation and development of the first phase of a system that is able to capture full human body motion data by a set-up of several Wiimotes placed on different human body segments. This will allow the development of an affordable store and forward treatment option that would enable and motivate physical rehabilitation patients and in particular stroke patients, to conduct physical therapy from home. Finally, by extending a professional 3D animation software tool (Blender), motion data captured through the new system can be mapped onto a virtual 3-D human model in real time, thereby making it possible to have a strong correlation between the physical human and a virtual character to enhance the clinical utility of this innovative technology.",
author = "Emmanouil Tsekleves and Donysios Skordoulis and Ioannis Paraskevopoulos and Cherry Kilbride",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.2316/P.2011.723-058",
language = "English",
volume = "723",
pages = "502--509",
editor = "C. Baumgartner",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011)",
publisher = "ACTA Press",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Wii your health

T2 - a low-cost wireless system for home rehabilitation after stroke using Wii remotes with its expansions and blender

AU - Tsekleves, Emmanouil

AU - Skordoulis, Donysios

AU - Paraskevopoulos, Ioannis

AU - Kilbride, Cherry

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Full body motion capture via the Wiimote and the new Wii MotionPlus sensor has yet to be investigated or developed. In addition, the mapping of the Wiimote-captured motion data to a computer generated 3D model inside an open source professional 3D animation tool has yet to be attempted. Within this paper the authors initiate a new study into full markerless human body motion tracking for physical rehabilitation. In particular, it includes the investigation and development of the first phase of a system that is able to capture full human body motion data by a set-up of several Wiimotes placed on different human body segments. This will allow the development of an affordable store and forward treatment option that would enable and motivate physical rehabilitation patients and in particular stroke patients, to conduct physical therapy from home. Finally, by extending a professional 3D animation software tool (Blender), motion data captured through the new system can be mapped onto a virtual 3-D human model in real time, thereby making it possible to have a strong correlation between the physical human and a virtual character to enhance the clinical utility of this innovative technology.

AB - Full body motion capture via the Wiimote and the new Wii MotionPlus sensor has yet to be investigated or developed. In addition, the mapping of the Wiimote-captured motion data to a computer generated 3D model inside an open source professional 3D animation tool has yet to be attempted. Within this paper the authors initiate a new study into full markerless human body motion tracking for physical rehabilitation. In particular, it includes the investigation and development of the first phase of a system that is able to capture full human body motion data by a set-up of several Wiimotes placed on different human body segments. This will allow the development of an affordable store and forward treatment option that would enable and motivate physical rehabilitation patients and in particular stroke patients, to conduct physical therapy from home. Finally, by extending a professional 3D animation software tool (Blender), motion data captured through the new system can be mapped onto a virtual 3-D human model in real time, thereby making it possible to have a strong correlation between the physical human and a virtual character to enhance the clinical utility of this innovative technology.

U2 - 10.2316/P.2011.723-058

DO - 10.2316/P.2011.723-058

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

VL - 723

SP - 502

EP - 509

BT - Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference Biomedical Engineering (Biomed 2011)

A2 - Baumgartner, C.

PB - ACTA Press

ER -