4.6 Article

Grip Force and 3D Push-Pull Force Estimation Based on sEMG and GRNN

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00343

Keywords

grip force; 3D push-pull force; force estimation; EMG; GRNN

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [91648206, 61325018, 61403080, 61673105, 61673114]
  2. Jiangsu Technology Development Project [BE2014132]
  3. Jiangsu Natural Science Foundation [BK20140641]
  4. Young Teacher Startup Foundation of Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics [56YAH17027]

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The estimation of the grip force and the 3D push-pull force (push and pull force in the three dimension space) from the electromyogram (EMG) signal is of great importance in the dexterous control of the EMG prosthetic hand. In this paper, an action force estimation method which is based on the eight channels of the surface EMG (sEMG) and the Generalized Regression Neural Network (GRNN) is proposed to meet the requirements of the force control of the intelligent EMG prosthetic hand. Firstly, the experimental platform, the acquisition of the sEMG, the feature extraction of the sEMG and the construction of GRNN are described. Then, the multi-channels of the sEMG when the hand is moving are captured by the EMG sensors attached on eight different positions of the arm skin surface. Meanwhile, a grip force sensor and a three dimension force sensor are adopted to measure the output force of the human's hand. The characteristic matrix of the sEMG and the force signals are used to construct the GRNN. The mean absolute value and the root mean square of the estimation errors, the correlation coefficients between the actual force and the estimated force are employed to assess the accuracy of the estimation. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) is also employed to test the difference of the force estimation. The experiments are implemented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed estimation method and the results show that the output force of the human's hand can be correctly estimated by using sEMG and GRNN method.

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