scholarly journals On the Use of Fuzzy and Permutation Entropy in Hand Gesture Characterization from EMG Signals: Parameters Selection and Comparison

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (20) ◽  
pp. 7144
Author(s):  
Alessandro Mengarelli ◽  
Andrea Tigrini ◽  
Sandro Fioretti ◽  
Stefano Cardarelli ◽  
Federica Verdini

The surface electromyography signal (sEMG) is widely used for gesture characterization; its reliability is strongly connected to the features extracted from sEMG recordings. This study aimed to investigate the use of two complexity measures, i.e., fuzzy entropy (FEn) and permutation entropy (PEn) for hand gesture characterization. Fourteen upper limb movements, sorted into three sets, were collected on ten subjects and the performances of FEn and PEn for gesture descriptions were analyzed for different computational parameters. FEn and PEn were able to properly cluster the expected numbers of gestures, but computational parameters were crucial for ensuring clusters’ separability and proper gesture characterization. FEn and PEn were also compared with other eighteen classical time and frequency domain features through the minimum redundancy maximum relevance algorithm and showed the best predictive importance scores in two gesture sets; they also had scores within the subset of the best five features in the remaining one. Further, the classification accuracies of four different feature sets presented remarkable increases when FEn and PEn are included as additional features. Outcomes support the use of FEn and PEn for hand gesture description when computational parameters are properly selected, and they could be useful in supporting the development of robotic arms and prostheses myoelectric control.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wim Pouw ◽  
Steven A. Harrison ◽  
Núria Esteve Gibert ◽  
James A. Dixon

Expressive moments in communicative hand gesture often align with emphatic stress in speech. It has recently been found that acoustic markers of emphatic stress arise naturally during steady-state phonation when upper-limb movements impart physical impulse on the body, most likely affecting acoustics via respiratory activity. In this confirmatory study, participants (N = 29) repeatedly uttered consonant-vowel CV (/pa/) mono-syllables while moving in particular phase relations with speech, or not moving the upper limbs. We show that respiration-related activity is affected by (especially high-impulse) gesturing when vocalizations occur near peaks in physical impulse. We further show that gesture-induced moments of bodily impulses increase the amplitude envelope of speech, while not similarly affecting the Fundamental Frequency (F0). Finally, tight relations between respiration-related activity and vocalization were observed, even in the absence of movement, but even more so when upper-limb movement is present. The current findings expand a developing line of research showing that speech is modulated by functional biomechanical linkages between hand gesture and the respiratory system. This identification gesture-speech biomechanics promises to provide an alternative phylogenetic, ontogenetic, and mechanistic explanatory route of why communicative upper limb movements co-occur with speech in humans.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. e0133709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Despard ◽  
Anne-Marie Ternes ◽  
Bleydy Dimech-Betancourt ◽  
Govinda Poudel ◽  
Andrew Churchyard ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Giuseppe Averta ◽  
Cosimo Della Santina ◽  
Edoardo Battaglia ◽  
Federica Felici ◽  
Matteo Bianchi ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document