User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- All-In-One Headset with Software Application
- Headset Controller
- Large Sensor
- Small Sensors
- Sensor Charger (charging station)
- REAL Sensor Bands
- Headset
- Plug the headset power cord into wall outlet and the headset to charge device.
- Press power button to power on or off headset. The power button is on top of the headset.
- Headset Controller
- • Buttons on the controller are used to access settings.
- Sensor Charger
- Plug sensor charger power cord into wall outlet and sensor charger to power on device to charge sensors.
- Large Sensor and Small Sensors
- • Activate or charge sensor devices by removing or placing back into the sensor charging station.
- Place sensor devices into the sensor bands.
- Sensor Bands
- See Section 3 in Operating Procedures on instructions to put on sensor bands.
- User Portals
- Access the User Portal through the Headset to perform the following:
- o Logging in
- o Selecting the activity
- o Initializing and syncing to sensors
- o Starting, modifying, or ending therapy session
- o Viewing data
- o Logging out
- o Selecting the application
- o Logging in
- o Adding or selecting patient
- o Initializing and syncing to sensors
- o Selecting, starting, modifying, or ending therapy session
- o Viewing data
- o Logging out
- SECTION 1: GETTING STARTED AND CHARGING COMPONENTS
- SECTION 3: START UP
- USER:
- 1. Using a personal device, log into the user portal using your username and password.
- 2. Select the activity assigned by your therapist within the user portal
- Section 4: ACTIVITY NAVIGATION
- Section 5: SYSTEM REMOVAL
Page 15 of 29
Hide and Seek can be used with or without a displayed avatar tracking the patient’s upper body as it
primarily relies on head movement and visual scanning ability. Hide and Seek puts the patient in a
pastoral setting with a number of animated animals that react to the patient’s acknowledgement of
them. This is both the first and last experience for the patient. At the end of the patient’s session, the
patient can visualize overall progress they made during the session in the form of virtual “rewards.”
Patients “find” a little penguin by hovering a blue “gaze pointer” on the penguin by turning and rotating
their head to exercise their cervical range of motion. The penguin will then disappear and reappear in a
different location. The pointer is positioned to represent the patient’s upper body vertical midline and is
itself a useful tool as some patients in neurorehabilitation have lost their sense of body position
resulting in “midline shift.” The blue pointer provides a visual, external cue to their true body midline
helping them relearn centering themselves. The Hide and Seek exercise encourages visual scanning of
their environment, an important functional ability, and cognitive recognition of nameable animals,
objects, and environmental locations in their immediate surrounding. HCPs may adjust various activity
parameters through the tablet.
Therapy Activity 2: Hot Air Balloon