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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38848226

ABSTRACT

Spike extraction by blind source separation (BSS) algorithms can successfully extract physiologically meaningful information from the sEMG signal, as they are able to identify motor unit (MU) discharges involved in muscle contractions. However, BSS approaches are currently restricted to isometric contractions, limiting their applicability in real-world scenarios. We present a strategy to track MUs across different dynamic hand gestures using adaptive independent component analysis (ICA): first, a pool of MUs is identified during isometric contractions, and the decomposition parameters are stored; during dynamic gestures, the decomposition parameters are updated online in an unsupervised fashion, yielding the refined MUs; then, a Pan-Tompkins-inspired algorithm detects the spikes in each MUs; finally, the identified spikes are fed to a classifier to recognize the gesture. We validate our approach on a 4-subject, 7-gesture + rest dataset collected with our custom 16-channel dry sEMG armband, achieving an average balanced accuracy of 85.58±14.91% and macro-F1 score of 85.86±14.48%. We deploy our solution onto GAP9, a parallel ultra-low-power microcontroller specialized for computation-intensive linear algebra applications at the edge, obtaining an energy consumption of 4.72 mJ @ 240 MHz and a latency of 121.3 ms for each 200 ms-long window of sEMG signal.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38885102

ABSTRACT

Surface electromyography (sEMG) is a State-of-the-Art (SoA) sensing modality for non-invasive human-machine interfaces for consumer, industrial, and rehabilitation use cases. The main limitation of the current sEMG-driven control policies is the sEMG's inherent variability, especially cross-session due to sensor repositioning; this limits the generalization of the Machine/Deep Learning (ML/DL) in charge of the signal-to-command mapping. The other hot front on the ML/DL side of sEMG-driven control is the shift from the classification of fixed hand positions to the regression of hand kinematics and dynamics, promising a more versatile and fluid control. We present an incremental online-training strategy for sEMG-based estimation of simultaneous multi-finger forces, using a small Temporal Convolutional Network suitable for embedded learning-on-device. We validate our method on the HYSER dataset, cross-day. Our incremental online training reaches a cross-day Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of (9.58 ± 3.89)% of the Maximum Voluntary Contraction on HYSER's RANDOM dataset of improvised, non-predefined force sequences, which is the most challenging and closest to real scenarios. This MAE is on par with an accuracy-oriented, non-embeddable offline training exploiting more epochs. Further, we demonstrate that our online training approach can be deployed on the GAP9 ultra-low power microcontroller, obtaining a latency of 1.49 ms and an energy draw of just 40.4 uJ per forward-backward-update step. These results show that our solution fits the requirements for accurate and real-time incremental training-on-device.

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