Conference paper
OzCHI '24, Proceedings of the 36th Australasian Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, 2025, pp. 580–590
APA
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Wei, Y., Quijano, L., Hu, Y., Yan, H., Chamorro-Koc, M. I., Gomez, R., & Kerr, G. (2025). Review of Recent Trends in Home-based Rehabilitation Assistive Devices Design for Shoulder Movement. In Proceedings of the 36th Australasian Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (pp. 580–590). New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3726986.3726993
Chicago/Turabian
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Wei, Yuanyuan, Luis Quijano, Yating Hu, Hao Yan, Marianella Ivonne Chamorro-Koc, Rafael Gomez, and Graham Kerr. “Review of Recent Trends in Home-Based Rehabilitation Assistive Devices Design for Shoulder Movement.” In Proceedings of the 36th Australasian Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, 580–590. OzCHI '24. New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery, 2025.
MLA
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Wei, Yuanyuan, et al. “Review of Recent Trends in Home-Based Rehabilitation Assistive Devices Design for Shoulder Movement.” Proceedings of the 36th Australasian Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, Association for Computing Machinery, 2025, pp. 580–90, doi:10.1145/3726986.3726993.
BibTeX Click to copy
@inproceedings{wei2025a,
title = {Review of Recent Trends in Home-based Rehabilitation Assistive Devices Design for Shoulder Movement},
year = {2025},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
pages = {580–590},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
series = {OzCHI '24},
doi = {10.1145/3726986.3726993},
author = {Wei, Yuanyuan and Quijano, Luis and Hu, Yating and Yan, Hao and Chamorro-Koc, Marianella Ivonne and Gomez, Rafael and Kerr, Graham},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 36th Australasian Conference on Human-Computer Interaction}
}
Assistive technology offers patients going through shoulder rehabilitation new possibilities for home-based rehabilitation. In our review, home-based rehabilitation refers to rehabilitation practices that can be completed in a home context. This review conducts a categorised comparison of home-based rehabilitation assistive device designs for shoulder movement by analysing literature to understand the developmental trends and challenges. This review focuses on applied interaction technologies, medical conditions, modes of intervention, control strategy, outcome measures, weight and portability, device operation, and interdisciplinary developers. The review also shows that assistive devices can be classified into three application areas: (1) robotic devices, (2) wearable devices, and (3) mechanical devices. In addition, current challenges, and possible directions for the future development of assistive shoulder rehabilitation are outlined at the end of the paper. Despite many existing digital technologies already used in shoulder home-based rehabilitation, there is a research gap in how existing design approaches can be informed by interdisciplinary knowledge inputs such as: engineering, interaction design, and rehabilitation study with end-user representatives.