4.7 Article

Segment-Wise Decomposition of Surface Electromyography to Identify Discharges Across Motor Neuron Populations

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3192272

Keywords

Electromyography; Neurons; Task analysis; Sociology; Discharges (electric); Muscles; Band-pass filters; Electromyography decomposition; neural decoding; motor unit; segment-wise; Convolution kernel compensation

Funding

  1. China National Key Research and Development Program [2018YFB1307200]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91948302]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [BX2021180]

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This study developed a segment-wise decomposition strategy to increase the number of motor units decoded from multiple motor neuron populations. The results showed that this method was able to decode significantly more motor units compared to the conventional method, indicating its feasibility and superiority in decoding motor activities.
Objective. The surface electromyography (EMG) decomposition techniques have shown promising results in neurophysiologic investigations, clinical diagnosis, and human-machine interfacing. However, current decomposition methods could only decode a limited number of motor units (MUs) because of the local convergence. The number of identified MUs remains similar even though more muscles or movements are involved, where multiple motor neuron populations are activated. The objective of this study was to develop a segment-wise decomposition strategy to increase the number of MU decoded from multiple motor neuron populations. Methods. The EMG signals were divided into several segments depending on the number of involved movements. The motor neurons, activated during each movement, were regarded as a population. The convolution kernel compensation (CKC) method was applied individually for each segment to decode the motor unit discharges from each motor neuron population. The MU filters were obtained in each segment and filtrated to estimate the MU spike trains (MUSTs) from the global EMG signals. The decomposition performance was validated on synthetic and experimental EMG signals. Main results. From synthetic EMG signals generated by two motor neuron populations, the proposed segment-wise CKC (swCKC) decoded significantly more MUs during low and medium excitation levels, with an increased rate of 16.3% to 75.4% compared with the conventional CKC. From experimental signals recorded during ten motor tasks, 133 +/- 24 MUs with the pulse-to-noise ratio of 36.6 +/- 6.5 dB were identified for each subject by swCKC, whereas the conventional CKC identified only 43 +/- 12 MUs. Conclusion and Significance. These results indicate the feasibility and superiority of the proposed swCKC to decode MU activities across motor neuron populations, extending the potential applications of EMG decomposition for neural decoding during multiple motor tasks.

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