Continuous monitoring of muscle coordination can provide valuable information regarding an individual's performance during physical activities. For example, changes in muscle coordination can indicate muscle fatigue during exhaustive exercise or can be used to track the rehabilitation progress of patients post-injury. Traditional methods to evaluate coordination often focus solely on measuring muscle activation with electromyography, ignoring timing changes of the resultant force produced by the activated muscle. Setups designed to evaluate force directly to study muscle coordination are often limited by either hyper-constrained settings or cost-prohibitive hardware. In this paper, we employ wearable, ultra-sensitive soft strain sensors that track muscle deformation for estimating changes in muscle coordination during cycling at different cadences and to exhaustion. The results were compared to muscle activation timing measured by electromyography and peak force timing measured by a cycle ergometer. We demonstrate that with an increase in cadence, the soft strain sensor and ergometer timing metrics align more closely than those measured by electromyography. We also demonstrate how muscle coordination is altered with the onset of fatigue during cycling to exhaustion.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ICORR58425.2023.10304718DOI Listing

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