DocumentCode
3784303
Title
Finite element modeling of electromagnetic signal propagation in a phantom arm
Author
T.A. Kuiken;N.S. Stoykov;M. Popovic;M. Lowery;A. Taflove
Author_Institution
Dept. of Phys. Medicine & Rehabilitation, Northwestern Univ. Med. Sch., Chicago, IL, USA
Volume
9
Issue
4
fYear
2001
Firstpage
346
Lastpage
354
Abstract
Improving the control of artificial arms remains a considerable challenge. It may be possible to graft remaining peripheral nerves in an amputated limb to spare muscles in or near the residual limb and use these nerve-muscle grafts as additional myoelectric control signals. This would allow simultaneous control of multiple degrees of freedom (DOF) and could greatly improve the control of artificial limbs. For this technique to be successful, the electromyography (EMG) signals from the nerve-muscle grafts would need to be independent of each other with minimal crosstalk. To study EMG signal propagation and quantify crosstalk, finite element (FE) models were developed in a phantom-arm model. The models were validated with experimental data collected by applying sinusoidal excitations to a phantom-arm model and recording the surface electric potential distribution. There was a very high correlation (r>0.99) between the FEM data and the experimental data, with the error in signal magnitude generally less than 5%. Simulations were then performed using muscle dielectric properties with static, complex, and full electromagnetic solvers. The results indicate that significant displacement currents can develop (>50% of total current) and that the fall-off of surface signal power varies with how the signal source is modeled.
Keywords
"Finite element methods","Electromagnetic modeling","Electromagnetic propagation","Imaging phantoms","Electromyography","Muscles","Crosstalk","Arm","Artificial limbs","Electric potential"
Journal_Title
IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/7333.1000114
Filename
1000114
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