Experience of adults with upper-limb difference and their views on sensory feedback for prostheses: a mixed methods study
Experience of adults with upper-limb difference and their views on sensory feedback for prostheses: a mixed methods study
Background: upper-limb prostheses are regularly abandoned, in part due to the mismatch between user needs and prostheses performance. Sensory feedback is among several technological advances that have been proposed to reduce device abandonment rates. While it has already been introduced in some high-end commercial prostheses, limited data is available about user expectations in relation to sensory feedback. The aim of this study is thus to use a mixed methods approach to provide a detailed insight of users’ perceptions and expectations of sensory feedback technology, to ensure the addition of sensory feedback is as acceptable, engaging and ultimately as useful as possible for users and, in turn, reduce the reliance on compensatory movements that lead to overuse syndrome.
Methods: the study involved an online survey (N = 37) and video call interviews (N = 15) where adults with upper-limb differences were asked about their experience with limb difference and prosthesis use (if applicable) and their expectations about sensory feedback to prostheses. The survey data were analysed quantitatively and descriptively to establish the range of sensory feedback needs and their variations across the different demographics. Reflexive thematic analysis was performed on the interview data, and data triangulation was used to understand key behavioural issues to generate actionable guiding principles for the development of sensory feedback systems.
Results: the survey provided a list of practical examples and suggestions that did not vary with the different causes of limb difference or prosthesis use. The interviews showed that although sensory feedback is a desired feature, it must prove to have more benefits than drawbacks. The key benefit mentioned by participants was increasing trust, which requires a highly reliable system that provides input from several areas of the hand rather than just the fingertips. The feedback system should also complement existing implicit feedback sources without causing confusion or discomfort. Further, the effect sensory feedback has on the users’ psychological wellbeing was highlighted as an important consideration that varies between individuals and should therefore be discussed. The results obtained were used to develop guiding principles for the design and implementation of sensory feedback systems.
Conclusions: this study provides a mixed-methods research on the sensory feedback needs of adults with upper-limb differences, enabling a deeper understanding of their expectations and worries. Guiding principles were developed based on the results of a survey and interviews to inform the development and assessment of sensory feedback for upper-limb prostheses.
Amputation, Prosthesis, Sensory feedback, Upper-limb, User needs
Jabban, Leen
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Metcalfe, Benjamin
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Raines, Jonathan
3dc8a5be-ad5f-41aa-a9ba-ce05587f785e
Zhang, Dingguo
b7c636b8-c59b-4e74-810b-792847e8d398
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
December 2022
Jabban, Leen
484d9d9d-4d42-4f40-8ad4-be6044dde8e0
Metcalfe, Benjamin
33fce643-9066-453f-a0ce-8d0b7e7a7772
Raines, Jonathan
3dc8a5be-ad5f-41aa-a9ba-ce05587f785e
Zhang, Dingguo
b7c636b8-c59b-4e74-810b-792847e8d398
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
Jabban, Leen, Metcalfe, Benjamin, Raines, Jonathan, Zhang, Dingguo and Ainsworth, Ben
(2022)
Experience of adults with upper-limb difference and their views on sensory feedback for prostheses: a mixed methods study.
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation, 19 (1), [80].
(doi:10.1186/s12984-022-01054-y).
Abstract
Background: upper-limb prostheses are regularly abandoned, in part due to the mismatch between user needs and prostheses performance. Sensory feedback is among several technological advances that have been proposed to reduce device abandonment rates. While it has already been introduced in some high-end commercial prostheses, limited data is available about user expectations in relation to sensory feedback. The aim of this study is thus to use a mixed methods approach to provide a detailed insight of users’ perceptions and expectations of sensory feedback technology, to ensure the addition of sensory feedback is as acceptable, engaging and ultimately as useful as possible for users and, in turn, reduce the reliance on compensatory movements that lead to overuse syndrome.
Methods: the study involved an online survey (N = 37) and video call interviews (N = 15) where adults with upper-limb differences were asked about their experience with limb difference and prosthesis use (if applicable) and their expectations about sensory feedback to prostheses. The survey data were analysed quantitatively and descriptively to establish the range of sensory feedback needs and their variations across the different demographics. Reflexive thematic analysis was performed on the interview data, and data triangulation was used to understand key behavioural issues to generate actionable guiding principles for the development of sensory feedback systems.
Results: the survey provided a list of practical examples and suggestions that did not vary with the different causes of limb difference or prosthesis use. The interviews showed that although sensory feedback is a desired feature, it must prove to have more benefits than drawbacks. The key benefit mentioned by participants was increasing trust, which requires a highly reliable system that provides input from several areas of the hand rather than just the fingertips. The feedback system should also complement existing implicit feedback sources without causing confusion or discomfort. Further, the effect sensory feedback has on the users’ psychological wellbeing was highlighted as an important consideration that varies between individuals and should therefore be discussed. The results obtained were used to develop guiding principles for the design and implementation of sensory feedback systems.
Conclusions: this study provides a mixed-methods research on the sensory feedback needs of adults with upper-limb differences, enabling a deeper understanding of their expectations and worries. Guiding principles were developed based on the results of a survey and interviews to inform the development and assessment of sensory feedback for upper-limb prostheses.
Text
s12984-022-01054-y
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 July 2022
Published date: December 2022
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the participants and charities that helped with sharing the survey including: Blesma, The Douglas Bader Foundation, Limbless Association, I am possible foundation, Limbs 4 Life, Alex Lewis Trust and E-Nable. The authors would also like to thank the stakeholders involved including Prof Laurence Kenney, Kameron Maxwell and Jim Ashworth-Beaumont. LJ would also like to thank Dr Alix Chadwell and Chantel Ostler for the thought provoking discussions and clinical insight.
Funding Information:
LJ received sponsorship through the Dr Brian Nicholson scholarship, Antony Best scholarship, the Esther Parkin Trust scholarship as well as the University of Bath through the University Research Studentship Award (URSA).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
Keywords:
Amputation, Prosthesis, Sensory feedback, Upper-limb, User needs
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 470449
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470449
ISSN: 1743-0003
PURE UUID: d61187cb-7588-429b-82a3-62626f5d9c38
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Date deposited: 11 Oct 2022 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:19
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Contributors
Author:
Leen Jabban
Author:
Benjamin Metcalfe
Author:
Jonathan Raines
Author:
Dingguo Zhang
Author:
Ben Ainsworth
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