The influence of scaffolding on intrinsic motivation and autonomous adherence to a game-based, unsupervised home rehabilitation program for people with upper extremity hemiparesis due to stroke. A randomized controlled trial
Gerard Fluet, Qinyin Qiu, Amanda Gross, Holly Gorin, Jigna Patel, Alma Merians, Sergei Adamovich

TL;DR
This study tested a home-based game system for stroke patients to improve arm function and found that it worked well without needing extra support.
Contribution
It shows that unsupervised, game-based rehabilitation can be effective for stroke recovery.
Findings
Both groups showed significant improvements in motor function over 12 weeks.
Scaffolding had no significant effect on adherence or motor outcomes.
21 participants achieved clinically meaningful improvements in UEFMA scores.
Abstract
This parallel, randomized controlled trial examines intrinsic motivation, adherence and motor function improvement demonstrated by two groups of subjects that performed a twelve-week, home-based upper extremity rehabilitation program. Seventeen subjects played games presenting eight to twelve discrete levels of increasing difficulty. Sixteen subjects performed the same activities controlled by success algorithms that modify game difficulty incrementally. 33 persons 20 to 80 years of age, at least six months post stroke with moderate to mild hemiparesis were randomized using a random number generator into the two groups. They were tested using the Action Research Arm Test, Upper Extremity Fugl Meyer Assessment, Stroke Impact Scale and Intrinsic Motivation Inventory pre and post training. Adherence was measured using timestamps generated by the system. Subjects had the Home Virtual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders · Virtual Reality Applications and Impacts
