LSTM-AE for Domain Shift Quantification in Cross-Day Upper-Limb Motion Estimation Using Surface Electromyography.

Journal: IEEE transactions on neural systems and rehabilitation engineering : a publication of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
Published Date:

Abstract

Although deep learning (DL) techniques have been extensively researched in upper-limb myoelectric control, system robustness in cross-day applications is still very limited. This is largely caused by non-stable and time-varying properties of surface electromyography (sEMG) signals, resulting in domain shift impacts on DL models. To this end, a reconstruction-based method is proposed for domain shift quantification. Herein, a prevalent hybrid framework that combines a convolutional neural network (CNN) and a long short-term memory network (LSTM), i.e. CNN-LSTM, is selected as the backbone. The paring of auto-encoder (AE) and LSTM, abbreviated as LSTM-AE, is proposed to reconstruct CNN features. Based on reconstruction errors (RErrors) of LSTM-AE, domain shift impacts on CNN-LSTM can be quantified. For a thorough investigation, experiments were conducted in both hand gesture classification and wrist kinematics regression, where sEMG data were both collected in multi-days. Experiment results illustrate that, when the estimation accuracy degrades substantially in between-day testing sets, RErrors increase accordingly and can be distinct from those obtained in within-day datasets. According to data analysis, CNN-LSTM classification/regression outcomes are strongly associated with LSTM-AE errors. The average Pearson correlation coefficients could reach -0.986 ± 0.014 and -0.992 ± 0.011, respectively.

Authors

  • Tianzhe Bao
  • Chao Wang
    College of Agriculture, Shanxi Agricultural University, Taigu, Shanxi, China.
  • Pengfei Yang
    Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China.
  • Sheng Quan Xie
    School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK. S.Q.Xie@leeds.ac.uk.
  • Zhi-Qiang Zhang
  • Ping Zhou