Publication | Open Access
A Proportional Pattern Recognition Control Scheme for Wearable A-mode Ultrasound Sensing
73
Citations
31
References
2019
Year
Haptic FeedbackMedical UltrasoundSimultaneous Gesture RecognitionEngineeringWearable TechnologyMovement BiomechanicsHaptic TechnologyMotor ControlAcoustic SensorSensorimotor RehabilitationMovement AnalysisKinesiologyPower UltrasoundApplied PhysiologyKinematicsMotor NeuroscienceRehabilitation EngineeringHuman MotionProportional Pattern RecognitionGesture ProcessingPhysical MedicineSensorimotor ControlHealth SciencesUltrasonicsRehabilitationUltrasoundSignal ProcessingGesture RecognitionMuscle Contraction ForcesElectromyographyHuman MovementFine Motor ControlWearable SensorMicromachined Ultrasonic Transducer
It is evident that the prevailing solution, myoelectric pattern recognition for prosthetic manipulation, constrains gesture-based interaction because of the lack of proportional control information such as exerted force. This paper reports an attempt, named simultaneous gesture recognition and muscle contraction force estimation, to realize proportional pattern recognition (PPR) control taking advantage of arm muscle deformation via wearable ultrasound sensing. We experiment with eight types of predefined hand motions, with a range of 0-60% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) using a wearable multichannel A-mode ultrasound system. The experiment result demonstrates that above 93.7% of gestures are correctly recognized during dynamic muscle contraction forces (0- 60% MVC), albeit only training at a slight force level (<;6% MVC). Besides, the adopted nonparametric Gaussian process regression estimates the muscle contraction forces accurately and synchronously, with average coefficient of determination, R <sup xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">2</sup> , and normalized root-mean-square error (nRMSE) of 0.927 and 0.102, respectively. These research outcomes demonstrate the feasibility of ultrasound-based PPR control, paving the way for musculature-driven applications such as finer prosthetic control, remote manipulation, and rehabilitation treatment.
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