A robust myoelectric pattern recognition framework based on individual motor unit activities against electrode array shifts

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Abstract

Background and objective: Electrode shift is always one of the critical factors to compromise the performance of myoelectric pattern recognition (MPR) based on surface electromyogram (SEMG). However, current studies focused on the global features of SEMG signals to mitigate this issue but it is just an oversimplified description of the human movements without incorporating microscopic neural drive information. The objective of this work is to develop a novel method for calibrating the electrode array shifts toward achieving robust MPR, leveraging individual motor unit (MU) activities obtained through advanced SEMG decomposition. Methods: All of the MUs from decomposition of SEMG data recorded at the original electrode array position were first initialized to train a neural network for pattern recognition. A part of decomposed MUs could be tracked and paired with MUs obtained at the original position based on spatial distribution of their MUAP waveforms, so as to determine the shift vector (describing both the orientation and distance of the shift) implicated consistently by these multiple MU pairs. Given the known shift vector, the features of the after-shift decomposed MUs were corrected accordingly and then fed into the network to finalize the MPR task. The performance of the proposed method was evaluated with data recorded by a 16 × 8 electrode array placed over the finger extensor muscles of 8 subjects performing 10 finger movement patterns. Results: The proposed method achieved a shift detection accuracy of 100 % and a pattern recognition accuracy approximating to 100 %, significantly outperforming the conventional methods with lower shift detection accuracies and lower pattern recognition accuracies (p < 0.05). Conclusions: Our method demonstrated the feasibility of using decomposed MUAP waveforms’ spatial distributions to calibrate electrode shift. This study provides a new tool to enhance the robustness of myoelectric control systems via microscopic neural drive information at an individual MU level.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108434
JournalComputer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine
Volume257
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Electrode shift
  • Myoelectric pattern recognition
  • Neural drive decoding
  • SEMG decomposition

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