System Architecture for VR Yoga Therapy Platform with 6-DoF Whole-Body Avatar Tracking

Chronic pain is a leading cause of morbidity among children and adolescents affecting 35% of the global population. Pediatric chronic pain management requires integrative health methods spanning physical and psychological subsystems through various mind-body interventions. Yoga therapy is one such m...

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Published inIEEE International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Virtual Reality (Online) Vol. 2024; pp. 360 - 366
Main Authors Kupin, Alexander Ah, Banerjee, Sean, Banerjee, Natasha, Roy, Serge H, Kline, Joshua C, Shiwani, Bhawna
Format Conference Proceeding Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States IEEE 2024
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ISSN2771-7453
2771-7453
DOI10.1109/AIxVR59861.2024.00062

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Summary:Chronic pain is a leading cause of morbidity among children and adolescents affecting 35% of the global population. Pediatric chronic pain management requires integrative health methods spanning physical and psychological subsystems through various mind-body interventions. Yoga therapy is one such method, known for its ability to improve the quality of life both physically and psychologically in chronic pain conditions. However, maintaining the clinical outcomes of personalized yoga therapy sessions at-home is challenging due to fear of movement, lack of motivation, and boredom. Virtual Reality (VR) has the potential to bridge the gap between the clinic and home by motivating engagement and mitigating pain-related anxiety or fear of movement. We developed a multi-modal algorithmic architecture for fusing real-time 3D human body pose estimation models with custom developed inverse kinematics models of physical movement to render biomechanically informed 6-DoF whole-body avatars capable of embodying an individual's real-time yoga poses within the VR environment. Experiments conducted among control participants demonstrated superior movement tracking accuracy over existing commercial off-the-shelf avatar tracking solutions, leading to successful embodiment and engagement. These findings demonstrate the feasibility of rendering virtual avatar movements that embody complex physical poses such as those encountered in yoga therapy. The impact of this work moves the field one step closer to an interactive system to facilitate at-home individual or group yoga therapy for children with chronic pain conditions.
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ISSN:2771-7453
2771-7453
DOI:10.1109/AIxVR59861.2024.00062