When 90% of the variance is not enough: residual EMG from muscle synergy extraction influences task performance

被引:25
作者
Barradas, Victor R. [1 ]
Kutch, Jason J. [2 ]
Kawase, Toshihiro [3 ]
Koike, Yasuharu [3 ]
Schweighofer, Nicolas [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Southern Calif, Biomed Engn, Los Angeles, CA 90007 USA
[2] Univ Southern Calif, Biokinesiol & Phys Therapy, Los Angeles, CA 90007 USA
[3] Tokyo Inst Technol, Inst Innovat Res, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
基金
日本学术振兴会; 美国国家卫生研究院; 日本科学技术振兴机构;
关键词
muscle synergies; residuals; virtual surgeries; MATRIX FACTORIZATION; REACHING MOVEMENTS; COORDINATION; FORCE; IDENTIFICATION; CONSTRUCTION; COMBINATIONS; ORGANIZATION; EXECUTION; NOISE;
D O I
10.1152/jn.00472.2019
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Muscle synergies are usually identified via dimensionality reduction techniques, such that the identified synergies reconstruct the muscle activity to an accuracy level defined heuristically, often set to 90% of the variance. Ilere, we question the assumption that the residual muscle activity not explained by the synergies is due to noise. We hypothesize instead that the residual activity is not entirely random and can influence the execution of motor tasks. Young healthy subjects performed an isometric reaching task in which the surface electromyography of 10 aim muscles was mapped onto a two-dimensional force used to control a cursor. Three to five synergies explained 90% of the variance in muscle activity. We altered the muscle-force mapping via "hard" and "easy" virtual surgeries. Whereas in both surgeries the forces associated with synergies spanned the same dimension of the virtual environment, the muscle-force mapping was as close as possible to the initial mapping in the easy surgery; in contrast, it was as far as possible in the hard surgery. This design maximized potential differences in reaching errors attributable to residual activity. Results show that the easy surgery produced smaller directional errors than the hard surgery. Additionally, simulations of surgeries constructed with 1 to 10 synergies show that the errors in the easy and hard surgeries differ significantly for up to 8 synergies, which explains 98% of the variance on average. Our study thus indicates the need for cautious interpretations of results derived from synergy extraction techniques based on heuristics with lenient accuracy levels. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The muscle synergy hypothesis posits that the central nervous system simplifies motor control by grouping muscles into modules. Current techniques use dimensionality reduction, such that the identified synergies reconstruct 90% of the muscle activity. We show that residual muscle activity following such identification can have a large systematic effect on movements, even when the number of synergies approaches the number of muscles. Current synergy extraction techniques must therefore be updated to identify true physiological synergies.
引用
收藏
页码:2180 / 2190
页数:11
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