Abstract

Emotional computing has been previously applied to assess physiological behavior in a wide variety of tasks and activities. This study extends for the first time the use of emotional computing in the field of balance rehabilitation training. A proof-of-concept study was conducted to assess arousal and pleasure response to a range of physical exercises from the OTAGO and HOLOBALANCE balance rehabilitation programs with varying levels of difficulty and physical demand. Eleven participants were enrolled and performed a set of exercises wearing an ECG sensor, reporting arousal and pleasure at the end of each session. A dataset of 264 unique sessions was collected and used to extract heart rate variability (HRV) features from the measured RR intervals and automatically assess user arousal and pleasure, evaluating different classification algorithms. The results suggested that assessment of both emotions is feasible, reaching an accuracy of 72% and 74% for arousal and pleasure estimation, resnectively. Clinical Relevance- Arousal and pleasure are clinically useful indicators of patient's experience and engagement while performing balance rehabilitation exercises with novel sensing technologies and monitoring platforms.

Full Text
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