Clinical protocols, interaction, and measurement in a transformative experience
TRoom®

At the Autonomous University of Nuevo León, TRoom® integrates clinical protocols, multisensory interaction, and therapeutic monitoring into an experience designed to transform specialized intervention. Its configuration combines central environmental control, patient records, session observations, facial recognition, and synchronized playback according to clinical treatment protocols, creating an immersive, structured, and measurable solution that enhances the value of care. The project is specified as a multisensory stimulation system with a clinical protocol, a local server, an exportable database, and comprehensive session management.
LONG DESCRIPTION
At the Autonomous University of Nuevo León , TROOM® shapes a high-value clinical experience where multisensory stimulation is combined with therapeutic structure, interactive technology, and precise monitoring. More than simply equipping a space, this implementation creates an environment capable of organizing, enriching, and supporting intervention processes through a single control interface, patient records, therapist observations, facial recognition, a local server, and multimedia content synchronized with clinical treatment protocols. The system was defined as a medical device with sanitary registration and centralized operation to control the laboratory's stimulation elements.
Its distinctive value lies in placing clinical protocols at the heart of the experience. The project incorporates a system of therapeutic sessions with an autism protocol for children aged 2 to 6 with communication and socialization difficulties. The stimuli are geared towards spontaneous communication, shared attention, social enjoyment, and pre-academic skills. These stimuli encompass visual, tactile, olfactory, auditory, cognitive, proprioceptive, and vestibular components, integrated into immersive, interactive, and sequential activities, with an initial assessment, behavioral level assignment, and more than 40 therapeutic sessions.
The experience is made even more powerful by the richness of its multisensory environment. The system integrates elements such as a ball pit with light and sound, an interactive keypad, a waterbed, an interactive cube, aroma diffusers, colored domes, fiber optics, interactive perimeter lighting, touch panels, an infinity image panel, a light board with puzzles, interactive platforms, and other components designed to respond in a coordinated manner to clinical protocols. This allows for the creation of more immersive, engaging, and meaningful sessions for the user, without compromising the therapeutic structure.
In addition to stimulation, the solution also measures. The project includes a wireless inertial sensor system with a gyroscope to record human performance variables, with applications in physical rehabilitation, teaching and learning, special education, coordination, dexterity, balance, memory, and physical assessment or training. These sensors allow for the measurement of movement, rotation, proximity, and other objective data that can be exported for external analysis, reinforcing TTMT®'s promise for Health: a multisensory intervention with measurement and feedback.
The result is an installation that positions the Autonomous University of Nuevo León as a space where clinical innovation translates into real-world experience. TROOM® not only makes care more immersive, but also more structured, measurable, and valuable for therapists, institutions, and users. In web terms, this case perfectly aligns with TTMT®'s approach to healthcare: presenting the clinical and operational benefits first, and then the technology that makes them possible.
























