• Med Eng Phys · Apr 2009

    Effect of spatial filtering on crosstalk reduction in surface EMG recordings.

    • Luca Mesin, Stuart Smith, Suzanne Hugo, Suretha Viljoen, and Tania Hanekom.
    • Laboratorio di Ingegneria del Sistema Neuromuscolare (LISiN), Dipartimento di Elettronica, Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca degli Abruzzi 24, Torino, 10129, Italy. luca.mesin@polito.it
    • Med Eng Phys. 2009 Apr 1; 31 (3): 374-83.

    AbstractIncreasing the selectivity of the detection system in surface electromyography (EMG) is beneficial in the collection of information of a specific portion of the investigated muscle and to reduce the contribution of undesired components, such as non-propagating components (due to generation or end-of-fibre effects) or crosstalk from nearby muscles. A comparison of the ability of different spatial filters to reduce the amount of crosstalk in surface EMG measurements was conducted in this paper using simulated signals. It focused on the influence of different properties of the muscle anatomy (changing subcutaneous layer thickness, skin conductivity, fibre length) and detection system (single, double and normal double differential, with two inter-electrode distances - IED) on the amount of crosstalk present in the measurements. A cylindrical multilayer (skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscle, bone) analytical model was used to simulate single fibre action potentials (SFAPs). Fibres were grouped together in motor units (MUs) and motor unit action potentials (MUAPs) were obtained by adding the SFAPs of the corresponding fibres. Interference surface EMG signals were obtained, modelling the recruitment of MUs and rate coding. The average rectified value (ARV) and mean frequency (MNF) content of the EMG signals were studied and used as a basis for determining the selectivity of each spatial filter. From these results it was found that the selectivity of each spatial filter varies depending on the transversal location of the measurement electrodes and on the anatomy. An increase in skin conductivity favourably affects the selectivity of normal double differential filters as does an increase in subcutaneous layer thickness. An increase in IED decreases the selectivity of all the analysed filters.

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