Publication | Open Access
Comparison of surface and intramuscular EMG pattern recognition for simultaneous wrist/hand motion classification
75
Citations
15
References
2013
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringMultiple DegreesBiometricsWearable TechnologyUpper ExtremityMotor ControlMovement AnalysisRehabilitation RoboticsIntramuscular EmgKinesiologyPattern RecognitionSimultaneous ControlApplied PhysiologyKinematicsRehabilitation EngineeringHealth SciencesRehabilitationGesture RecognitionPhysical TherapyElectromyographyHuman Movement
The simultaneous control of multiple degrees of freedom (DOFs) is important for the intuitive, life-like control of artificial limbs. The objective of this study was to determine whether the use of intramuscular electromyogram (EMG) improved pattern classification of simultaneous wrist/hand movements compared to surface EMG. Two pattern classification methods were used in this analysis, and were trained to predict 1-DOF and 2-DOF movements involving wrist rotation, wrist flexion/extension, and hand open/close. The classification methods used were (1) a single pattern classifier discriminating between 1-DOF and 2-DOF motion classes, and (2) a parallel set of three classifiers to predict the activity of each of the 3 DOFs. We demonstrate that in this combined wrist/hand classification task, the use of intramuscular EMG significantly decreases classification error compared to surface EMG for the parallel configuration (p<0.01), but not for the single classifier. We also show that the use of intramuscular EMG mitigates the increase in errors produced when the parallel classifier method is trained without 2-DOF motion class data.
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