Abstract

Understanding the contributions of therapist skill during intervention is essential for improving existing rehabilitation methodologies. This study aims to characterize therapist intervention on an important activity of daily living, the sit-to-stand motion. Using the concept of muscle synergy, we quantify and compare naturally-occurring standing strategies with those induced by a physical therapist. In this paper, we show that natural standing strategies are not shared among healthy subjects. However, each subject retains their own set of strategies. Moreover, the results suggest that a therapist does not introduce new strategies during therapy, but rather modulates the existing strategies of the individuals. Using such a low-dimensional representation of standing behavior allows for development of low-cost tools for wider distribution.

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