4,423 research outputs found

    Estimation of Upper Limb Joint Angle Using Surface EMG Signal

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    In the development of robot-assisted rehabilitation systems for upper limb rehabilitation therapy, human electromyogram (EMG) is widely used due to its ability to detect the user intended motion. EMG is one kind of biological signal that can be recorded to evaluate the performance of skeletal muscles by means of a sensor electrode. Based on recorded EMG signals, user intended motion could be extracted via estimation of joint torque, force or angle. Therefore, this estimation becomes one of the most important factors to achieve accurate user intended motion. In this paper, an upper limb joint angle estimation methodology is proposed. A back propagation neural network (BPNN) is developed to estimate the shoulder and elbow joint angles from the recorded EMG signals. A Virtual Human Model (VHM) is also developed and integrated with BPNN to perform the simulation of the estimated angle. The relationships between sEMG signals and upper limb movements are observed in this paper. The effectiveness of our developments is evaluated with four healthy subjects and a VHM simulation. The results show that the methodology can be used in the estimation of joint angles based on EMG

    A novel spatial feature for the identification of motor tasks using high-density electromyography

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    Estimation of neuromuscular intention using electromyography (EMG) and pattern recognition is still an open problem. One of the reasons is that the pattern-recognition approach is greatly influenced by temporal changes in electromyograms caused by the variations in the conductivity of the skin and/or electrodes, or physiological changes such as muscle fatigue. This paper proposes novel features for task identification extracted from the high-density electromyographic signal (HD-EMG) by applying the mean shift channel selection algorithm evaluated using a simple and fast classifier-linear discriminant analysis. HD-EMG was recorded from eight subjects during four upper-limb isometric motor tasks (flexion/extension, supination/pronation of the forearm) at three different levels of effort. Task and effort level identification showed very high classification rates in all cases. This new feature performed remarkably well particularly in the identification at very low effort levels. This could be a step towards the natural control in everyday applications where a subject could use low levels of effort to achieve motor tasks. Furthermore, it ensures reliable identification even in the presence of myoelectric fatigue and showed robustness to temporal changes in EMG, which could make it suitable in long-term applications.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Human knee abnormality detection from imbalanced sEMG data

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    The classification of imbalanced datasets, especially in medicine, is a major problem in data mining. Such a problem is evident in analyzing normal and abnormal subjects about knee from data collected during walking. In this work, surface electromyography (sEMG) data were collected during walking from the lower limb of 22 individuals (11 with and 11 without knee abnormality). Subjects with a knee abnormality take longer to complete the walking task than healthy subjects. Therefore, the SEMG signal length of unhealthy subjects is longer than that of healthy subjects, resulting in a problem of imbalance in the collected sEMG signal data. Thus, the development of a classification model for such datasets is challenging due to the bias towards the majority class in the data. The collected sEMG signals are challenging due to the contribution of multiple motor units at a time and their dependency on neuromuscular activity, physiological and anatomical properties of the involved muscles. Hence, automated analysis of such sEMG signals is an arduous task. A multi-step classification scheme is proposed in this research to overcome this limitation. The wavelet denoising (WD) scheme is used to denoise the collected sEMG signals, followed by the extraction of eleven time-domain features. The oversampling techniques are then used to balance the data under analysis by increasing the training minority class. The competency of the proposed scheme was assessed using various computational classifiers with 10 fold cross-validation. It was found that the oversampling techniques improve the performance of all studied classifiers when applied to the studied imbalanced sEMG data. (c) 2021 Elsevier Lt

    On the identification of sensory information from mixed nerves by using single-channel cuff electrodes

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    Background: Several groups have shown that the performance of motor neuroprostheses can be significantly improved by detecting specific sensory events related to the ongoing motor task (e.g., the slippage of an object during grasping). Algorithms have been developed to achieve this goal by processing electroneurographic (ENG) afferent signals recorded by using single-channel cuff electrodes. However, no efforts have been made so far to understand the number and type of detectable sensory events that can be differentiated from whole nerve recordings using this approach. Methods: To this aim, ENG afferent signals, evoked by different sensory stimuli were recorded using single-channel cuff electrodes placed around the sciatic nerve of anesthetized rats. The ENG signals were digitally processed and several features were extracted and used as inputs for the classification. The work was performed on integral datasets, without eliminating any noisy parts, in order to be as close as possible to real application. Results: The results obtained showed that single-channel cuff electrodes are able to provide information on two to three different afferent (proprioceptive, mechanical and nociceptive) stimuli, with reasonably good discrimination ability. The classification performances are affected by the SNR of the signal, which in turn is related to the diameter of the fibers encoding a particular type of neurophysiological stimulus. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that signals of acceptable SNR and corresponding to different physiological modalities (e.g. mediated by different types of nerve fibers) may be distinguished

    Automatic signal and image-based assessments of spinal cord injury and treatments.

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    Spinal cord injury (SCI) is one of the most common sources of motor disabilities in humans that often deeply impact the quality of life in individuals with severe and chronic SCI. In this dissertation, we have developed advanced engineering tools to address three distinct problems that researchers, clinicians and patients are facing in SCI research. Particularly, we have proposed a fully automated stochastic framework to quantify the effects of SCI on muscle size and adipose tissue distribution in skeletal muscles by volumetric segmentation of 3-D MRI scans in individuals with chronic SCI as well as non-disabled individuals. We also developed a novel framework for robust and automatic activation detection, feature extraction and visualization of the spinal cord epidural stimulation (scES) effects across a high number of scES parameters to build individualized-maps of muscle recruitment patterns of scES. Finally, in the last part of this dissertation, we introduced an EMG time-frequency analysis framework that implements EMG spectral analysis and machine learning tools to characterize EMG patterns resulting in independent or assisted standing enabled by scES, and identify the stimulation parameters that promote muscle activation patterns more effective for standing. The neurotechnological advancements proposed in this dissertation have greatly benefited SCI research by accelerating the efforts to quantify the effects of SCI on muscle size and functionality, expanding the knowledge regarding the neurophysiological mechanisms involved in re-enabling motor function with epidural stimulation and the selection of stimulation parameters and helping the patients with complete paralysis to achieve faster motor recovery
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