Título |
Musically Informed Sonification for Chronic Pain Rehabilition: Facilitating Progress & Avoiding Over-doing |
Autores |
Newbold, Joseph W. , Bianchi-Berthouze, Nadia , Gold, Nicolas E. , TAJADURA JIMÉNEZ, ANA, Williams, Amanda CdC , ACM |
Publicación externa |
No |
Alcance |
Capítulo de un Libro |
Naturaleza |
Científica |
Web |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85015054154&doi=10.1145%2f2858036.2858302&partnerID=40&md5=41c5a6aaaf27ae82881e45de2bd8b0d1 |
Fecha de publicacion |
01/01/2016 |
ISI |
000380532905059 |
Scopus Id |
2-s2.0-85015054154 |
DOI |
10.1145/2858036.2858302 |
Abstract |
In self-directed chronic pain physical rehabilitation it is important that the individual can progress as physical capabilities and confidence grow. However, people with chronic pain often struggle to pass waht they have identified as safe boundaries. At the same time, over-activity due to the desire to progress fast or function more normally, may lead to set-backs. We investigate how musically-informed movement sonfication can be used as an implicit mechanism to both avoid overdoing and facilitate progress during stretching exercises. We sonify an end target-point in a stretch exercises, using a stable sound (i.e., where the sonification is musically resolved) to encourage movements ending and an unstable sound (i.e., musically unresolved) to encourage continuation. Results to healthy participants show that instability leads to progression further beyond the target-point while stability leads to a smoother stop beyond this point. We conclude discussing how these finding should generalize to the CP population. |
Palabras clave |
Musically informed sonification; physical rehabilition; H.5.2 User Interfaces: Auditory (non-speech) feedback |
Miembros de la Universidad Loyola |
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