We need more engineers in the stroke area, they understand the scientific method.
http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=132287&CultureCode=en
Within the CogWatch European project, coordinated by the University
of Birmingham, researchers at the Higher Technical School of
Telecommunications Engineering and the Higher Technical School of
Industrial Engineering of the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid have
designed the architecture and the first prototype of a system that
provides cognitive rehabilitation for patients suffering from apraxia.
Apraxia is a neurological disorder after suffering a stroke.
Apraxia is a cognitive impairment characterized by loss of the
ability to carry out learned purposeful movements despite having the
desire and the physical ability to perform the movements. This
deficiency increases when the task includes more than a sequence of
movements with complex actions and even the use of an object. The
recovering can have significant effects after those strokes and it can
be hard for patients to return to an independent life in their own
homes.
The partners of the CogWatch project have developed a system that
allows patients to perform these tasks in their own home and accompanied
by a close environment. In this sense, while they are making a coffee
or are dressing to go for a walk, the system will guide and warn them of
mistakes as well as the actions needed to correct them.
The first prototype is already finished and is currently being
assessed, the patient will interact with a screen which will show text
messages and animations to guide their steps when they are not able to
remember how to do it or they are doing wrongly. To do this, the system
needs some relevant information for real-time processing.
This information is acquired through cameras and sensors (strength
and speed) set in the objects that patients use to perform the tasks
(kitchen utensils, clothes). Researchers used a KinectTM camera, an
affordable device which is suitable to obtain body movements data with
the accuracy needed.
In addition to helping patients to perform their daily tasks, the
system can store all the information and send it to hospital. Therefore,
doctors can conduct a remote monitoring and keep them updated of the
evolution of the patient.
The CogWatch project started in 2011 and is expected to be finished
in 2014, by then, the most advanced versions of the developed system
will be on the market.
No comments:
Post a Comment