From sequential to simultaneous prosthetic control: Decoding simultaneous finger movements from individual ground truth EMG patterns
Paper i proceeding, 2024

Myoelectric bionic limbs hold the promise of restoring functionality and improving life quality for people with amputation. With recent advances in surgical reconstruction, which created additional signal sites for myoelectric control, intuitively controlling all fingers of a prosthetic hand became a possibility. To fully utilize a multiple degree of freedom (DoF) bionic hand, the fingers need to be controllable both individually and simultaneously. However, training algorithms to decode motor intent typically requires large sets of labeled data. This data requirement grows combinatorically with each additional DoF, complicating the training process for multi-DoF control. Here, we evaluated a method to create labeled simultaneous data from linearly combining individual movement data. We found that a classifier trained on such artificial data performed equivalently in decoding 3 DoF real-time finger movement to a classifier trained on ground truth data. However, its effectiveness diminishes with more complex tasks, i.e., 5 DoF finger control. In both cases, linearly combining individual movements decreased the time to acquire labeled data to train the classifier by up to 85%.

myoelectric

pattern recognition

prosthetics

deep learning

simultaneous control

Författare

Jan Zbinden

Center for Bionics and Pain Research

Chalmers, Elektroteknik, System- och reglerteknik

Steven Edwards

Vanderbilt University

Center for Bionics and Pain Research

Proceedings of the Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, EMBS

1557170X (ISSN)


9798350371499 (ISBN)

46th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, EMBC 2024
Orlando, USA,

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Medicinsk modellering och simulering

Robotik och automation

DOI

10.1109/EMBC53108.2024.10782980

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-01-24