SVR modelling of mechanomyographic signals predicts neuromuscular stimulation-evoked knee torque in paralyzed quadriceps muscles undergoing knee extension exercise.

Comput Biol Med

Clinical Exercise and Rehabilitation Unit, Discipline of Exercise and Sports Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia; Department of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 50603, Malaysia.

Published: February 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers used support vector regression (SVR) modeling to estimate knee torque from mechanomyographic (MMG) signals in individuals with spinal cord injuries during NMES-assisted knee extension.
  • The SVR model achieved high estimation accuracy, with R-values of 95% for training and 94% for testing with a Gaussian kernel and slightly lower values for a polynomial kernel.
  • The findings suggest that MMG signals can effectively serve as a proxy for NMES-assisted torque, paving the way for improved applications in research and clinical practices involving NMES systems.

Article Abstract

Background And Objective: Using traditional regression modelling, we have previously demonstrated a positive and strong relationship between paralyzed knee extensors' mechanomyographic (MMG) signals and neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES)-assisted knee torque in persons with spinal cord injuries. In the present study, a method of estimating NMES-evoked knee torque from the knee extensors' MMG signals using support vector regression (SVR) modelling is introduced and performed in eight persons with chronic and motor complete spinal lesions.

Methods: The model was developed to estimate knee torque from experimentally derived MMG signals and other parameters related to torque production, including the knee angle and stimulation intensity, during NMES-assisted knee extension.

Results: When the relationship between the actual and predicted torques was quantified using the coefficient of determination (R), with a Gaussian support vector kernel, the R value indicated an estimation accuracy of 95% for the training subset and 94% for the testing subset while the polynomial support vector kernel indicated an accuracy of 92% for the training subset and 91% for the testing subset. For the Gaussian kernel, the root mean square error of the model was 6.28 for the training set and 8.19 for testing set, while the polynomial kernels for the training and testing sets were 7.99 and 9.82, respectively.

Conclusions: These results showed good predictive accuracy for SVR modelling, which can be generalized, and suggested that the MMG signals from paralyzed knee extensors are a suitable proxy for the NMES-assisted torque produced during repeated bouts of isometric knee extension tasks. This finding has potential implications for using MMG signals as torque sensors in NMES closed-loop systems and provides valuable information for implementing this method in research and clinical settings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compbiomed.2020.103614DOI Listing

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