Abstract

A reliable and functional neural interface is necessary to control individual finger movements of assistive robotic hands. Non-invasive surface electromyogram (sEMG) can be used to predict fingertip forces and joint kinematics continuously. However, concurrent prediction of kinematic and dynamic variables in a continuous manner remains a challenge. The purpose of this study was to develop a neural decoding algorithm capable of concurrent prediction of fingertip forces and finger dynamic movements. High-density electromyogram (HD-EMG) signal was collected during finger flexion tasks using either the index or middle finger: isometric, dynamic, and combined tasks. Based on the data obtained from the two first tasks, motor unit (MU) firing activities associated with individual fingers and tasks were derived using a blind source separation method. MUs assigned to the same tasks and fingers were pooled together to form MU pools. Twenty MUs were then refined using EMG data of a combined trial. The refined MUs were applied to a testing dataset of the combined task, and were divided into five groups based on the similarity of firing patterns, and the populational discharge frequency was determined for each group. Using the summated firing frequencies obtained from five groups of MUs in a multivariate linear regression model, fingertip forces and joint angles were derived concurrently. The decoding performance was compared to the conventional EMG amplitude-based approach. In both joint angles and fingertip forces, MU-based approach outperformed the EMG amplitude approach with a smaller prediction error (Force: 5.36±0.47 vs 6.89±0.39 %MVC, Joint Angle: 5.0±0.27° vs 12.76±0.40°) and a higher correlation (Force: 0.87±0.05 vs 0.73±0.1, Joint Angle: 0.92±0.05 vs 0.45±0.05) between the predicted and recorded motor output. The outcomes provide a functional and accurate neural interface for continuous control of assistive robotic hands.

Full Text
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