Stable Responsive EMG Sequence Prediction and Adaptive Reinforcement With Temporal Convolutional Networks

被引:48
作者
Betthauser, Joseph L. [1 ]
Krall, John T. [2 ]
Bannowsky, Shain G. [2 ]
Levay, Gyorgy [3 ]
Kaliki, Rahul R. [3 ]
Fifer, Matthew S. [2 ,4 ]
Thakor, Nitish, V [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Elect & Comp Engn, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
[2] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Biomed Engn, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
[3] Infinite Biomed Technol LLC, Baltimore, MD USA
[4] Johns Hopkins Univ, Appl Phys Lab, Res & Exploratory Dev Dept, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
关键词
Electromyography; Predictive models; Stability analysis; Convolution; Decoding; Computational modeling; Prosthetics; Biomedical monitoring; Reinforcement learning; Neural networks; Recurrent neural networks; Electromyographic (EMG); stability; latency; sequence; amputee; reinforcement; temporal convolutional network (TCN); ED-TCN; PATTERN-RECOGNITION; CLASSIFICATION; SIGNALS;
D O I
10.1109/TBME.2019.2943309
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Prediction of movement intentions from electromyographic (EMG) signals is typically performed with a pattern recognition approach, wherein a short dataframe of raw EMG is compressed into an instantaneous feature-encoding that is meaningful for classification. However, EMG signals are time-varying, implying that a frame-wise approach may not sufficiently incorporate temporal context into predictions, leading to erratic and unstable prediction behavior. Objective: We demonstrate that sequential prediction models and, specifically, temporal convolutional networks are able to leverage useful temporal information from EMG to achieve superior predictive performance. Methods: We compare this approach to other sequential and frame-wise models predicting 3 simultaneous hand and wrist degrees-of-freedom from 2 amputee and 13 non-amputee human subjects in a minimally constrained experiment. We also compare these models on the publicly available Ninapro and CapgMyo amputee and non-amputee datasets. Results: Temporal convolutional networks yield predictions that are more accurate and stable (p < 0.001) than frame-wise models, especially during inter-class transitions, with an average response delay of 4.6 ms (p < 0.001) and simpler feature-encoding. Their performance can be further improved with adaptive reinforcement training. Significance: Sequential models that incorporate temporal information from EMG achieve superior movement prediction performance and these models allow for novel types of interactive training. Conclusions: Addressing EMG decoding as a sequential modeling problem will lead to enhancements in the reliability, responsiveness, and movement complexity available from prosthesis control systems.
引用
收藏
页码:1707 / 1717
页数:11
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