Publications by authors named "Moinuddin Bhuiyan"

Typical electromyogram (EMG) processors estimate EMG signal standard deviation (EMG σ ) via moving average root mean square (RMS) or mean absolute value (MAV) filters, whose outputs are used in force estimation, prosthesis/orthosis control, etc. In the inevitable presence of additive measurement noise, some processors subtract the noise standard deviation from EMG RMS (or MAV). Others compute a root difference of squares (RDS)-subtract the noise variance from the square of EMG RMS (or MAV), all followed by taking the square root.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although clinical percussion remains one of the most widespread traditional noninvasive methods for diagnosing pulmonary disease, the available analysis of physical characteristics of the percussion sound using modern signal processing techniques is still quite limited. The majority of existing literature on the subject reports either time-domain or spectral analysis methods. However, Fourier analysis, which represents the signal as a sum of infinite periodic harmonics, is not naturally suited for decomposition of short and aperiodic percussion signals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Used for centuries in the clinical practice, audible percussion is a method of eliciting sounds by tapping various areas of the human body either by finger tips or by a percussion hammer. Despite its advantages, pulmonary diagnostics by percussion is still highly subjective, depends on the physician's skills, and requires quiet surroundings. Automation of this well-established technique could help amplify its existing merits while removing the above drawbacks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF