DocumentCode
47611
Title
Sparse Optimal Motor Estimation (SOME) for Extracting Commands for Prosthetic Limbs
Author
Yao Li ; Smith, Lauren H. ; Hargrove, Levi J. ; Weber, D.J. ; Loeb, Gerald E.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Volume
21
Issue
1
fYear
2013
fDate
Jan. 2013
Firstpage
104
Lastpage
111
Abstract
It is possible to replace amputated limbs with mechatronic prostheses, but their operation requires the user´s intentions to be detected and converted into control signals to the actuators. Fortunately, the motoneurons (MNs) that controlled the amputated muscles remain intact and capable of generating electrical signals, but these signals are difficult to record. Even the latest microelectrode array technologies and targeted motor reinnervation can provide only sparse sampling of the hundreds of motor units that comprise the motor pool for each muscle. Simple rectification and integration of such records is likely to produce noisy and delayed estimates of the actual intentions of the user. We have developed a novel algorithm for optimal estimation of motor pool excitation based on the recruitment and firing rates of a small number (2-10) of discriminated motor units. We first derived the motor estimation algorithm from normal patterns of modulated MN activity based on a previously published model of individual MN recruitment and asynchronous frequency modulation. The algorithm was then validated on a target motor reinnervation subject using intramuscular fine-wire recordings to obtain single motor units.
Keywords
artificial limbs; biomedical electrodes; medical signal processing; microelectrodes; muscle; SOME; amputated limbs; amputated muscles; asynchronous frequency modulation; commands extraction; control signals; delayed estimates; electrical signal recording; intramuscular fine-wire recordings; mechatronic prostheses; microelectrode array technologies; motoneurons; motor pool; noisy estimates; optimal estimation; prosthetic limbs; sparse optimal motor estimation; targeted motor reinnervation; user intentions; Estimation; Force; Frequency modulation; Muscles; Recruitment; Skin; Motor neuron pool; sparse estimation; targeted motor reinnervation; Action Potentials; Algorithms; Artificial Limbs; Electromyography; Humans; Motor Neurons; Neuromuscular Junction; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Synaptic Transmission;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2012.2218286
Filename
6313919
Link To Document