https://jneuroengrehab.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12984-017-0343-x
- Daniel A. JacobsEmail authorView ORCID ID profile,
- Jeffrey R. Koller,
- Katherine M. Steele and
- Daniel P. Ferris
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation201815:2
© The Author(s) 2018
Received: 16 May 2017
Accepted: 13 December 2017
Published: 3 January 2018
Abstract
Background
Modules of muscle recruitment can be
extracted from electromyography (EMG) during motions, such as walking,
running, and swimming, to identify key features of muscle coordination.
These features may provide insight into gait adaptation as a result of
powered assistance. The aim of this study was to investigate the changes
(module size, module timing and weighting patterns) of surface EMG data
during assisted and unassisted walking in an powered, myoelectric,
ankle-foot orthosis (ankle exoskeleton).
Methods
Eight healthy subjects wore bilateral
ankle exoskeletons and walked at 1.2 m/s on a treadmill. In three
training sessions, subjects walked for 40 min in two conditions:
unpowered (10 min) and powered (30 min). During each session, we
extracted modules of muscle recruitment via nonnegative matrix
factorization (NNMF) from the surface EMG signals of ten muscles in the
lower limb. We evaluated reconstruction quality for each muscle
individually using R2
and normalized root mean squared error (NRMSE). We hypothesized that
the number of modules needed to reconstruct muscle data would be the
same between conditions and that there would be greater similarity in
module timings than weightings.
Results
Across subjects, we found that six
modules were sufficient to reconstruct the muscle data for both
conditions, suggesting that the number of modules was preserved. The
similarity of module timings and weightings between conditions was
greater then random chance, indicating that muscle coordination was also
preserved. Motor adaptation during walking in the exoskeleton was
dominated by changes in the module timings rather than module
weightings. The segment number and the session number were significant
fixed effects in a linear mixed-effect model for the increase in R2 with time.
Conclusions
Our results show that subjects walking
in a exoskeleton preserved the number of modules and the coordination of
muscles within the modules across conditions. Training (motor
adaptation within the session and motor skill consolidation across
sessions) led to improved consistency of the muscle patterns. Subjects
adapted primarily by changing the timing of their muscle patterns rather
than the weightings of muscles in the modules. The results of this
study give new insight into strategies for muscle recruitment during
adaptation to a powered ankle exoskeleton.
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