Publication | Open Access
Gaming Beyond the Novelty Effect of Immersive Virtual Reality for Physical Rehabilitation
40
Citations
43
References
2021
Year
Physical ActivityEngineeringMixed RealityWearable TechnologyVirtual HumanSensorimotor RehabilitationAccessible GameMovement AnalysisKinesiologyNovelty EffectVirtual RealityImmersive ExperiencesImmersive TechnologyImmersive Virtual RealityPhysical RehabilitationGame DesignHealth SciencesSport RehabilitationRehabilitationMulti-user VrPhysical TherapyVirtual WorldsExtended RealityHuman MovementIvr GameSerious Exercise Games
Immersive virtual reality (iVR) head-mounted display (HMD) systems paired with serious exercise games can positively augment physical rehabilitation process from both engagement and analytics perspectives. This article presents a serious game for iVR HMD-based long-term upper-extremity exercise. We demonstrate the capabilities of our game through a case study with five users recovering from upper-extremity injuries. We examine how our program maintains engagement and motivation over eight weeks, where users completed biweekly prescribed movements framed as protecting a virtual butterfly. We assess user experiences through a mixture of biomarkers from brainwave, heart rate, and galvanic skin response recorded at runtime, as well as motion capture and behavioral game data. Our results suggest that the iVR game was an effective medium in inducing high compliance, physical performance, and biometric changes even with increasing difficulty beyond the novelty effect period. We conclude with considerations of future work for iVR physical therapy games that adapt to biometric response.
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