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Multifunctional control of artificial limbs via electromyographic (EMG) actuation requires means for reliably recognizing or distinguishing between the various functions on the basis of the recorded EMG data. Furthermore, constraints of weight, cost, and computation time on practical prosthesis application must be satisfied. An approach to the aforementioned recognition problem is given in terms of deriving a fast parametric-recognition algorithm whereby the autoregressive-moving-average (ARMA) parameters and the Kalman filter parameters of the EMG time series are identified. It is shown that the resulting identified parameters yield sufficient information to discriminate between a small number of upper extremity functions. Problems involved in practical prosthesis control via the present approach and problems of hardware realization are discussed to illustrate the validity of the approach.
Graupe et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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