Clinical Validation of an On-Device AI-Driven Real-Time Human Pose Estimation and Exercise Prescription Program; Prospective Single-Arm Quasi-Experimental Study
Seoyoon Heo, Taeseok Choi, Wansuk Choi

TL;DR
A smartphone app using AI to guide resistance training improves strength and fitness in young adults without gym access.
Contribution
First clinical validation of on-device AI for real-time exercise guidance with outcomes comparable to traditional programs.
Findings
Muscular strength increased by 4.39 kg in 1RM squat after 16 weeks.
Body fat decreased by 2.92% while skeletal muscle mass increased by 2.19 kg.
VO2max improved by 1.82 mL/kg/min, showing enhanced cardiorespiratory fitness.
Abstract
Background: Physical inactivity remains a major public health challenge, particularly for underserved populations lacking exercise facility access. AI-powered smartphone applications with real-time human pose estimation offer scalable solutions, but they lack rigorous clinical validation. Objective: This study validates the clinical efficacy of a 16-week on-device AI-driven resistance training program using MediaPipe pose estimation technology in young adults with limited facility access. Primary outcomes included muscular strength (1RM squat), body composition, functional movement (FMS), and cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2max). Methods: A single-group pre–post study enrolled 216 participants (mean age 23.77 ± 4.02 years; 69.2% male), with 146 (67.6%) completing the protocol. Participants performed three 30 min weekly sessions of seven compound exercises delivered via a smartphone app…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports Performance and Training · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology · Physical Activity and Health
