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  4. High Performance Wearable Ultrasound as a Human-Machine Interface for Wrist and Hand Kinematic Tracking
 
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2024
Journal Article
Title

High Performance Wearable Ultrasound as a Human-Machine Interface for Wrist and Hand Kinematic Tracking

Abstract
Objective: Non-invasive human machine interfaces (HMIs) have high potential in medical, entertainment, and industrial applications. Traditionally, surface electromyography (sEMG) has been used to track muscular activity and infer motor intention. Ultrasound (US) has received increasing attention as an alternative to sEMG-based HMIs. Here, we developed a portable US armband system with 24 channels and a multiple receiver approach, and compared it with existing sEMG- and US-based HMIs on movement intention decoding. Methods: US and motion capture data was recorded while participants performed wrist and hand movements of four degrees of freedom (DoFs) and their combinations. A linear regression model was used to offline predict hand kinematics from the US (or sEMG, for comparison) features. The method was further validated in real-time for a 3-DoF target reaching task. Results: In the offline analysis, the wearable US system achieved an average R<sup>2</sup> of 0.94 in the prediction of four DoFs of the wrist and hand while sEMG reached a performance of R<sup>2</sup>= 0.60. In online control, the participants achieved an average 93% completion rate of the targets. Conclusion: When tailored for HMIs, the proposed US A-mode system and processing pipeline can successfully regress hand kinematics both in offline and online settings with performances comparable or superior to previously published interfaces. Significance: Wearable US technology may provide a new generation of HMIs that use muscular deformation to estimate limb movements. The wearable US system allowed for robust proportional and simultaneous control over multiple DoFs in both offline and online settings.
Author(s)
Sgambato, Bruno Grandi
Imperial College London
Hasbani, Milia H.
Imperial College London
Barsakcioglu, Deren Yusuf
Imperial College London
Ibánez, J.
Imperial College London
Jakob, A.
Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik IBMT  
Fournelle, Marc  orcid-logo
Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik IBMT  
Tang, Meng-Xing
Imperial College London
Farina, Dario
Imperial College London
Journal
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering  
Funder
Horizon 2020
Open Access
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2023.3307952
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik IBMT  
Keyword(s)
  • A-mode

  • Human-machine interfaces

  • surface electromyography

  • ultrasound

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