HDE-Array: Development and Validation of a New Dry Electrode Array Design to Acquire HD-sEMG for Hand Position Estimation.

Rolandino G., Zangrandi C., Vieira T., Luigi Cerone G., Andrews B., FitzGerald JJ.

This paper aims to introduce HDE-Array (High-Density Electrode Array), a novel dry electrode array for acquiring High-Density surface electromyography (HD-sEMG) for hand position estimation through RPC-Net (Recursive Prosthetic Control Network), a neural network defined in a previous study. We aim to demonstrate the hypothesis that the position estimates returned by RPC-Net using HD-sEMG signals acquired with HDE-Array are as accurate as those obtained from signals acquired with gel electrodes. We compared the results, in terms of precision of hand position estimation by RPC-Net, using signals acquired by traditional gel electrodes and by HDE-Array. As additional validation, we performed a variance analysis to confirm that the presence of only two rows of electrodes does not result in an excessive loss of information, and we characterized the electrode-skin impedance to assess the effects of the voltage divider effect and power line interference. Performance tests indicated that RPC-Net, used with HDE-Array, achieved comparable or superior results to those observed when used with the gel electrode setup. The dry electrodes demonstrated effective performance even with a simplified setup, highlighting potential cost and usability benefits. These results suggest improvements in the accessibility and user-friendliness of upper-limb rehabilitation devices and underscore the potential of HDE-Array and RPC-Net to revolutionize control for medical and non-medical applications.

DOI

10.1109/TNSRE.2024.3490796

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2024-01-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

32

Pages

4004 - 4013

Total pages

9

Keywords

Humans, Electromyography, Hand, Electrodes, Equipment Design, Reproducibility of Results, Male, Algorithms, Adult, Neural Networks, Computer, Female, Electric Impedance, Artificial Limbs, Young Adult, Sensitivity and Specificity, Muscle, Skeletal

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