<span lang="EN-US">Conventional motor rehabilitation therapies followed by stroke survivors during their recovery process, are typically intense and involve numerous repetitions of task-specific recommended exercises. However, due to the lack of short-term or immediate results, patients tend to lose motivation on the rehabilitation process, and on performing the therapist recommended exercises at home between sessions. The work described in this article proposes to engage the patients with the therapeutic exercises by transforming the latter into specially designed serious games. After an initial evaluation by therapists, a pilot study was conducted on a rehabilitation clinic that showed that this system is adequate for about 75% of the clinical cases treated. The proposed game was globally well-accepted by patients, showing to be motivational and engaging. These promising results lead us to believe that immersive-based games can indeed be a valuable aid for motor rehabilitation therapies.</span>
Recovering from a traumatic incident (e.g, a stroke) implies rigorous and demanding therapies to ensure recovery of the lost capabilities. Due to the lack of short-term visible results, stroke patients tend to lose interest in their recovery process and frequently do not follow their therapists’ suggestions to continue performing their training at home, between physiotherapy sessions. This article explores the extent to which common computer games or specifically crafted games can serve as a rehabilitation practice, but also how conventional therapeutic devices might be transformed to be incorporated into games. Furthermore, we propose a platform that follows the opportunity of creating serious games that are designed for stroke patients with reduced upper limb mobility while following the same principles of common therapeutic procedures. This platform was carefully built with the purpose of allowing patients to comply tele-rehabilitation and promoting the execution of the recommended training at home. Following these ideas, we integrated two carefully designed games that have been tested and validated in our previous works, and we added a top-layer characterized by an online back-end application for therapists that allows them to observe their patients’ progress over time and draw different conclusions.
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