Abstract

Muscle activity and human motion are useful parameters to map the diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of neurological and movement disorders. In laboratory and clinical environments, electromyography and motion capture systems enable the collection of accurate, high-resolution data on human movement and corresponding muscle activity. However, controlled surroundings limit both the length of time and the breadth of activities that can be measured. Features of movement, critical to understanding patient progress, can change during the course of a day and daily activities may not correlate to the limited motions examined in a laboratory. We introduce a system to measure motion and muscle activity simultaneously over the course of a day in an uncontrolled environment with minimal preparation time and ease of implementation that enables daily usage. Our system combines a bespoke inertial measurement unit (IMU) and mechanomyography sensor, which measures the mechanical signal of muscular activity. The IMU can collect data continuously, and transmit wirelessly, for up to 10 h. We describe the hardware design and validation, and outline the data analysis (including data processing and activity classification algorithms) for the sensing system. Furthermore, we present two pilot studies to demonstrate utility of the system, including activity identification in six able-bodied subjects with an accuracy of 98%, and monitoring motion/muscle changes in a subject with cerebral palsy and of a single leg amputee over extended periods ( $\sim$ 5 h). We believe these results provide a foundation for mapping human muscle activity and corresponding motion changes over time, providing a basis for a range of novel rehabilitation therapies.

Highlights

  • Mechatronic systems monitoring human activity are accepted as fundamental components in biophysical analysis, with strong impact in fields such as physiotherapy, motor control, rehabilitation, and sports performance [1]–[5]

  • The sensor is packaged with a custom-made inertial measurement unit (IMU) we have developed for simultaneous data capture

  • 3) Validation Results: Analysis of the results produced from simultaneous Vicon and IMU validation showed a high accuracy across each plane and activity

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Summary

Introduction

Mechatronic systems monitoring human activity are accepted as fundamental components in biophysical analysis, with strong impact in fields such as physiotherapy, motor control, rehabilitation, and sports performance [1]–[5]. Simultaneous measurement of physical movement and muscle activity can identify physiological features indicative of health, neural functionality, and response to rehabilitation or training. Their fusion, is normally conducted in laboratory or clinical environments, which restricts the activities that can be tracked as well as the collection time window; pervasive data (collected externally, outside of a laboratory) is not Manuscript submitted June 10, 2017. Wearable system capable of logging data from motion and muscle activity for extended periods in the field has the potential to significantly impact research and clinical practice in sensory-motor control. Patient activity monitored pervasively would enable improved disease diagnoses, tracking of rehabilitation progress, and the provision of remote therapy [6]

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