Literature DB >> 29808098

Feasibility of Muscle Synergy Outcomes in Clinics, Robotics, and Sports: A Systematic Review.

Juri Taborri1, Valentina Agostini2, Panagiotis K Artemiadis3, Marco Ghislieri2, Daniel A Jacobs4, Jinsook Roh5,6, Stefano Rossi1.   

Abstract

In the last years, several studies have been focused on understanding how the central nervous system controls muscles to perform a specific motor task. Although it still remains an open question, muscle synergies have come to be an appealing theory to explain the modular organization of the central nervous system. Even though the neural encoding of muscle synergies remains controversial, a large number of papers demonstrated that muscle synergies are robust across different tested conditions, which are within a day, between days, within a single subject, and between subjects that have similar demographic characteristics. Thus, muscle synergy theory has been largely used in several research fields, such as clinics, robotics, and sports. The present systematical review aims at providing an overview on the applications of muscle synergy theory in clinics, robotics, and sports; in particular, the review is focused on the papers that provide tangible information for (i) diagnosis or pathology assessment in clinics, (ii) robot-control design in robotics, and (iii) athletes' performance assessment or training guidelines in sports.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 29808098      PMCID: PMC5902115          DOI: 10.1155/2018/3934698

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Bionics Biomech        ISSN: 1176-2322            Impact factor:   1.781


1. Introduction

Motor tasks are achieved by activating an appropriate set of muscles [1]. The number of recruited muscles depends on the task constraints of a specific movement [1]. The central nervous system (CNS) plays the main role in the motor control since it activates the specific muscle choosing both the magnitude and the timing of the activation [2]. The organization of the CNS in controlling and coordinating a large number of muscles still represents unclearly in the field of motor control [3]. The CNS may decrease the complexity of motor control by reducing the dimensionality of the controlled variables, which is the number of muscles [4]. Since Bernstein proposed the topic of many degrees of freedom in motor control (1967), several researchers focused on understanding how the CNS can limit the control signals to activate a large number of muscles [5]. The activation of muscle synergies, rather than each muscle individually, represents the most appealing idea to explain how the CNS bypasses the difficulty in controlling a large variety of muscles [6-9]. These modules are commonly named muscle synergies, which are defined as the coherent activation, in space and time, of a group of muscles. Muscle synergies can be extracted by factorizing data acquired by means of surface electromyography (EMG). Nonnegative matrix factorization [10] is the most widespread algorithm used for factorization, even though it was demonstrated that similar results can be obtained by applying other methods, such as principal or independent component analysis and inverse Gaussian [11, 12]. Factorization leads to the computation of muscle synergy vectors (W) and temporal activation patterns (C); the first one is a time-invariant matrix that contains the weights corresponding to the contribution of each muscle to the specific synergy, while the second one is a time-variant waveform that represents the neural signal modulating the excitation of the specific synergy. EMG data can be obtained as a linear combination of muscle synergy vectors and temporal activation patterns, whose dimensions depend on the number of muscle synergies needed to perform a specific motor task [13]. In order to demonstrate that muscle synergies can objectively represent an effective tool to understand the organization of the CNS in motor control and they are not a mere output of a mathematical approach, several studies have been conducted on all the methodological issues related to EMG factorization by means of muscle synergies. In particular, the studies have been focused on the effects of the number and the selected muscles [14], the factorization algorithms [12], the averaging or concatenating repetitions of the same task [15], and the repeatability of the methods [11, 16] on the output of a muscle synergy model. All the mentioned papers demonstrated the good reliability and repeatability of the muscle synergy theory regardless of the selected muscles, the applied factorization algorithms, and the used postprocessing procedures. Due to the promising results, muscle synergies were used to describe the muscle activity in several applications, such as clinics [6, 17–51], robotics [52-67], and sports [68-87]. The present systematic review aims at providing an overview on the possible applications of the muscle synergy theory in the three above-mentioned research fields. In particular, literature was reviewed focusing on the aims, enrolled subjects, recorded muscles, data processing, data analysis, results, and related tangible conclusions of each study.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Search Strategy

A literature review was performed on Scopus and PubMed databases in order to find a paper focused on the applications of the muscle synergy theory in clinics, robotics, and sports. The electronic search started on August 2017, and it finished on October 2017. The included keywords were muscle synergies; electromyography; muscle activity; muscle coordination; EMG, muscle synergy vectors; muscle synergy activation patterns; EMG factorization; motor control; locomotion; clinical gait analysis; balance; postural control; rehabilitation; EMG-based robot control; robotics; sports; sports performance. In addition, wildcard symbols, such as hyphens or inverted commas, were used to consider all possible variations of root words. Moreover, references of each found article were carefully checked not to miss important papers that have not been highlighted in the electronic search [88]. All authors conducted the literature search.

2.2. Inclusion Criteria

The initial inclusion criteria were based on the contents of the title and abstract. Then, the articles were screened to check whether they met the following criteria. Firstly, they were written in English; secondly, they were published from January 2006 to October 2017. Finally, we included only one paper published by the same authors if other papers and/or conference proceedings presented the same contents.

2.3. Data Extraction

Publications that met the initial inclusion criteria were downloaded into Mendeley Desktop 1.17.11 for further screening. In order to make the review readable and focused on the authors' intention, as claimed in the Introduction section, the included papers were firstly divided into one of the three categories: clinics, robotics, and sports. Then, the following information was collected from each paper: (i) what the aims were, (ii) what the actual application was, (iii) which subjects were enrolled, (iv) which muscles were recorded, (v) how data were processed and analyzed, and (vi) which results and conclusions were obtained.

2.4. Quality Assessment

To make an initial selection of the large number of papers that are available for the present review, a quality assessment was performed. The quality of each paper was assessed in terms of internal, statistical, and external validity [89]. In particular, the internal validity allows assessing the validity on bias of the research design and the operational study, the statistical validity permits quantifying statistical significance of the results, and the external validity is useful for examining the generalization of the study [90]. All the authors were asked to answer an 18-item checklist. In particular, the used checklist (Table 1) provided information on (i) internal validity (question numbers 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, 13, and 14), (ii) statistical validity (question numbers 15, 16, 17, and 18), and (iii) external validity (question numbers 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, and 11). Each item of the checklist had to be answered with “+” or “−” corresponding to a score of 1 and 0, respectively. It is worth noticing that the 18-item checklist is similar to the ones commonly used in literature for systematical and/or meta-analysis reviews [91-95], and it was adjusted based on the specific review topic.
Table 1

Criteria for quality assessment of internal validity (IV), statistical validity (SV), and external validity (EV).

CriteriaPossible outcomes
Aim of the work
(1) Description of a specific, clearly stated purpose (IV)+/−
(2) The research question is scientifically relevant (EV)+/−
Inclusion criteria (selection bias)
(3) Description of inclusion and exclusion criteria (IV-EV)+/−
(4) Inclusion and exclusion criteria are the same for all tested groups (IV)+/−
(5) Inclusion and exclusion criteria reflect the general population (EV)+/−
Data collection (performance bias)
(6) Data collection is clearly described and reliable (IV-EV)+/−
(7) Same data collection method used for all the subjects (IV)+/−
(8) Data collection reflects the usual methodology in the field (EV)+/−
Data loss (attrition bias)
(9) Different data loss between groups (IV)+/−
(10) Data loss < 20% (EV)+/−
Outcome (detection bias)
(11) Outcomes are topic-relevant (EV)+/−
(12) Outcomes are the same for all the subjects (IV)+/−
Data presentation
(13) Frequencies of most important outcome measures (IV)+/−
(14) Presentation of the data is sufficient to assess the adequacy of the analysis (IV)+/−
Statistical approach
(15) Appropriate statistical analysis techniques (SV)+/−
(16) Clearly state the statistical test used (SV)+/−
(17) State and reference the analytical software used (SV)+/−
(18) Sufficient number of subjects (SV)+/−
Papers that reached a score equal or more than 11, that is, at least 60% of “+” among the answers, in the majority of the authors can be defined as “high quality” [92, 94]. In the clinics section, a further selection of the available papers was performed taking into consideration only publications that provided tangible results useful for improving neuromuscular diagnosis and rehabilitation assessment for locomotion, balance, and upper limb functions. Taking into account the robotics section, only papers that proposed the synergy-based control as a viable alternative to the traditional myoelectric control and that tested the synergy-based control on robotic devices with subjects were deeply discussed. Focusing on sports, we further skimmed the paper by selecting only ones that proposed tangible outcomes useful for improving the athlete performance assessment and/or to plan an athlete-specific training session. A flowchart of the systematic review process is reported in Figure 1.
Figure 1

Flowchart of the systematic review process. NC, NR, and NS stand for number of papers in the clinics, robotics, and sports sections, respectively.

Since the acronyms used for the muscles were not consistent in the examined papers, we decided to standardize the name of muscles as reported in Table 2.
Table 2

Acronyms of human full-body muscles.

AcronymMuscle
ADDAdductor magnus
ALAdductor longus
ANCAnconeus
BBBiceps brachii
BBmBiceps brachii (medius)
BBlBiceps brachii (long head)
BFlhBiceps femoris (long head)
BRBrachialis
BRDBrachioradialis
DELTaDeltoideus (anterior)
DELTmDeltoideus (medius)
DELTpDeltoideus (posterior)
ECRExtensor carpi radialis
EDCExtensor digitorum communis
ECUExtensor carpi ulnaris
EDLExtensor digitorum longus
EOExternal oblique
ESErector spinae
ESCErector spinae cervical region
ESLErector spinae lumbar region
ESTErector spinae thoracic region
FCRFlexor carpi radialis
FCUFlexor carpi ulnaris
FDFlexor digitorum
FDIFirst dorsal interosseous
FDSFlexor digitorum superficialis
GLGastrocnemius lateralis
GLUmaxGluteus maximus
GLUmedGluteus medius
GMGastrocnemius medialis
IIliocostalis
ISInfraspinatus
LLongissimus
LDLatissimus dorsi
PLPeroneus longus
PMPectoralis major
PMcPectoralis major (clavicular)
PROPronator teres
RARectus abdominis
RFRectus femoris
RMajRhomboid major
SCMSternocleidomastoid
SEMTSemitendinosus
SMSemimembranosus
SOLSoleus
SSSupraspinatus
SUPSupinator
TTrapezius
TATibialis anterior
TBTriceps brachii
TBlTriceps brachii (long head)
TBlatTriceps (lateral head)
TFLTensor fasciae latae
TITrapezius inferior
TMTrapezius medius
TMajTeres major
TUTrapezius upper
VLVastus lateralis
VMVastus medialis

3. Results and Discussions

3.1. Clinics

Due to the large amount of papers focused on muscle synergies in clinical applications, this paragraph is divided into two main sections. The former takes into account the muscle synergy extraction in locomotion and balance, and the latter concerns the functionalities of the upper limb.

3.1.1. Locomotion and Balance

The electronic search in the cited databases and the cross-referencing evaluation returned as a result 60 publications dealing with muscle synergies in the context of neuromuscular pathologies and rehabilitation. The application of the above-mentioned inclusion criteria allowed the selection of 17 papers that provide tangible results and a better understanding of the disabilities that result from an impaired nervous system. Table 3 describes the distribution of the selected papers considering different pathologies that could affect locomotion and balance.
Table 3

Papers using muscle synergies in clinical practice/rehabilitation for locomotion and balance task.

N %References
Stroke744.43%[1720, 2224]
Cerebral palsy (CP)316.67%[25, 27, 51]
Spinal cord injury (SCI)211.11%[28, 29]
Parkinson's disease (PD)211.11%[30, 31]
Multiple sclerosis15.56%[32]
ACL1 injury15.56%[33]
Aging15.56%[34]

1Anterior cruciate ligament.

Details of all cited papers are reported in Table 4.
Table 4

Selected locomotion and balance studies using muscle synergies.

ReferencePathologyAimSubjectsTasksMuscles (segments)Outcomes
[17] Clark et al. 2010StrokeEvaluate change in motor control55 patients20 healthy subjectsOverground walking and treadmill16 (lower limbs)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Number of synergies related to walking performance
[18] Ferrante et al. 2016StrokeDesign a multichannel functional electrical stimulation controller2 patients13 healthy subjectsOverground walking and treadmill7 (lower limb)(i) Four synergies in healthy subjects(ii) Three synergies in patients(iii) Four synergies after FES
[19] Kautz et al. 2017StrokeEvaluate change in motor control56 patients17 healthy subjectsOverground walking and treadmill16 (lower limbs)(i) Similar muscle synergies in the two walking conditions
[20] Gizzi et al. 2011StrokeEvaluate change in motor control10 patients10 healthy subjects6 m long walking32 (full-body)(i) Different muscle synergy vectors(ii) Similar activation profiles and number of synergies
[22] Hashiguchi et al. 2016StrokeEvaluate change in muscle synergies due to rehabilitation13 patientsOverground walking8 (lower limb)(i) Same number of muscle synergies(ii) Merging synergies as an index for motor coordination
[23] Coscia et al. 2015StrokeAssess the relationship between gait asymmetry and muscle synergies12 patients10 healthy subjectsWalking on a treadmill24 (lower limbs)(i) Similar muscle synergies in less affected limb(ii) Altered muscle synergy organization in the affected limb
[24] Barroso et al. 2017StrokeAssess the walking performance9 patientsOverground walking22 (trunk and lower limb)(i) Fewer synergies in the paretic side(ii) Muscle synergies useful for walking performance assessment
[25] Steele et al. 2015Cerebral palsyExamine motor modification549 patients84 healthy childrenOverground walking5 (lower limb)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Number of synergies as index for CP assessment
[27] Shuman et al. 2017Cerebral palsyEvaluate the repeatability of muscle synergies across days5 patients6 healthy childrenOverground walking16 (lower limbs)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Muscle synergies repeatable between days in both groups
[28] Fox et al. 2013Spinal cord injuryEvaluate change in motor control5 patients5 healthy childrenLocomotion tasks12 (lower limb)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Similar modular organization for all tested tasks
[29] Hayes et al. 2014Spinal cord injuryQuantify neuromuscular deficits in muscle coordination8 patients8 healthy subjectsOverground walking14 (lower limb)(i) Different synergy organization(ii) Similar synergy during walking with metronome
[30] Allen et al. 2017Parkinson's diseaseAssess changes in control of gait and balance after dance-based rehabilitation9 patientsDance (tango)13 (lower back and limb)(i) No modifications in muscle synergies(ii) Decrease in muscle synergy variability
[31] Rodriguez et al. 2013Parkinson's diseaseEvaluate change in motor control15 patients14 healthy olderWalking on a treadmill16 (lower limbs)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Similar muscle synergies(iii) Different activation profiles
[32] Lencioni 2016Multiple sclerosisEvaluate change in motor control17 patients12 healthy subjectsOverground walking8 (lower limb)(i) Similar muscle synergy organization(ii) Different activation profiles
[33] Serrancolì et al. 2016Anterior cruciate ligamentEvaluate change in motor control18 patients10 healthy subjectsOverground walking16 (lower limbs)(i) Higher cocontraction in patients(ii) Different activation profiles
[34] Monaco et al. 2010AgingEvaluate change in motor control7 younger subjects7 older subjectsOverground walking12 (lower limb)(i) Similar muscle synergy organization
[51] Tang et al. 2015Cerebral palsyAssess lower extremity dysfunction12 patients8 healthy children10 healthy adultsOverground walking16 (lower limbs)(i) Greater variability in muscle synergy organization in patients(ii) Relationship between muscle synergies and motor dysfunctions
In the following subparagraphs, one paper on poststroke patients, one on spinal cord injury, one on Parkinson's disease, and one on cerebral palsy will be further discussed since they provided tangible results useful for improving neuromuscular diagnosis and rehabilitation assessment. (1) Stroke. In this section, we report the work of Clark et al. [17], since it deeply investigated muscle synergies in poststroke subjects during walking at different speeds. The authors compared 55 subjects with poststroke hemiparesis and 20 healthy adults in terms of motor coordination during treadmill walking at different speeds. Volunteers with hemiparesis performed walking trials of 30 s duration at self-selected comfortable speed (SS) and at fastest comfortable speed (FS), while healthy participants walked at SS, FS, and six additional speeds ranging from 0.3 to 1.8 m/s. Bipolar electrodes were used to record EMGs from 8 lower limb muscles (TA, SOL, GM, VM, RF, SEMT-SM, BFlh, and GLUmed) of each side. The authors found a preservation of the low-dimensional modular organization of muscle coordination in both healthy and poststroke subjects with hemiparesis, but the ability to activate independently the motor synergies was compromised in the paretic side of poststroke patients. The number of muscle synergies in poststroke individuals was reduced in the paretic side due to a merging of motor synergies, revealing impairments in lower-limb muscle coordination and an overall reduction in the complexity of locomotor control. This decrease in the number of independent synergies was also correlated with poorer walking performance, such as self-selected walking speed, speed modulation, and step length asymmetry. Thus, authors suggested that motor synergies could provide a quantitative description of the motor control deficits following stroke. (2) Cerebral Palsy. In this section, we reported the work of Steele et al. [25] which examined motor synergy modifications in individuals with CP during gait. The aim of the study was to evaluate if participants with CP demonstrate lower complexity of motor coordination during locomotion compared to healthy subjects. Muscle synergies during gait were analyzed for 549 participants with CP and 84 unimpaired individuals, selected from a database of over 6600 subjects. Surface EMG signals from 5 lower limb muscles (RF, SEMT-SM, BFlh, TA, and GM) were acquired from the most affected side during one randomly selected barefoot cycle. Results demonstrated that fewer synergies were required to describe muscle coordination during locomotion in subjects with CP. Patients' motor control was characterized by one or two muscle synergies, while three or four synergies were required in healthy subjects. In conclusion, the outcomes allow considering the synergy number as an index for the assessment of CP. (3) Spinal Cord Injury. The article reviewed in this section provides a detailed description of the effects of the incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI) on the locomotor control of children during different locomotion tasks. Fox et al. [28] focused their work on neuromuscular control of locomotor tasks in children with iSCI and in uninjured children. Authors enrolled five children with iSCI and five age-matched controls who were asked to perform different locomotor tasks, such as treadmill walking, overground walking, pedalling, supine lower extremity flexion/extension, stair climbing, and crawling. For each task, EMGs related to both lower limbs were recorded from 6 muscles: TA, GM, VM, RF, SM-SEMT, and GLUmed. In the assessment of altered muscle coordination, fewer motor synergies were required to explain muscle activations in the lower limbs of injured children compared to healthy ones. However, in both groups, a similar modular organization across different locomotor tasks suggested that the nervous system could coordinate complex lower limb movements starting from a small set of elementary synergies. Thus, these findings suggest that the rehabilitation of the locomotion might have benefits for a large variety of locomotor tasks. (4) Parkinson's Disease. In the following, we discuss the work of Allen et al. [30], since it provides useful information about changes in muscle coordination after rehabilitation in subjects with (PD). The aim of the study was to use muscle synergies to assess changes in neuromuscular control of gait and balance in subjects with PD after a partnered, dance-based rehabilitation session. Nine volunteers affected by PD were enrolled in the study. Each subject performed an intensive rehabilitation during 15 Adapted Tango (AT) lessons with a dance instructor. The EMG signals from 13 muscles of the right leg and lower back (RA, EO, ESL, GLUmed, TFL, BFlh, RF, VM, GM, GL, SOL, PL, and TA) were acquired during overground walking at self-selected speed (gait control) and during ramp-and-hold translations of the support surface (balance control). The results revealed no increase in the number of motor synergies despite improvements in gait and postural control immediately after rehabilitation. After AT, the great majority of participants showed decreased motor synergy variability and increased motor synergy consistency in both walking and balance tasks. Furthermore, this study demonstrated that the metrics of consistency, distinctness, and generalizability of motor synergies are more sensitive to improvements in gait and balance function than the number of muscle synergies.

3.1.2. Upper Extremity Functions

Using the search criteria of Section 2.1, we found 60 publications referencing muscle synergies in the result of upper-limb pathology and rehabilitation training. Applying the inclusion criteria, we selected 16 papers for inclusion in this section. The most common exclusion applied to the selected papers was the lack of a clinical subject population. We made an exception by including an experimentally induced pain along with chronic pain. Table 5 describes the distribution of the selected papers considering different pathologies that could affect the upper limb.
Table 5

Papers using muscle synergies in clinical practice/rehabilitation specific to the upper body.

N %References
Stroke961.10%[3644]
Cerebral palsy15.56%[26]
Spinal cord injury (SCI)15.56%[45]
Dystonia15.56%[46]
Pain422.22%[4750]
Details of all cited papers are reported in Table 6.
Table 6

Selected upper limb functionality studies using muscle synergies.

ReferencePathologyAimSubjectsTasksMuscles (segments)Outcomes
[26] Tang et al. 2017Cerebral palsyAssess the upper limb motor dysfunction14 patients10 healthy childrenReaching tasks10 (trunk and upper limb)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Greater synergy variability in patients
[36] Cheung et al. 2012StrokeAssess the upper limb motor dysfunction31 patientsReaching tasks17 (upper limbs)(i) Reduced synergies in affected arm(ii) Muscle synergies as marker for physiological evaluation
[37] Lee et al. 2013StrokeAssess the ability to modulate muscle coordination14 patients4 healthy subjectsIsometric tasks9 (upper limb)(i) Correlation with clinical scores(ii) Muscle synergy vectors as index for pathology severity
[38] Roh et al. 2013StrokeAssess the upper limb motor dysfunction10 patients6 healthy subjectsIsometric tasks8 (upper limb)(i) Different muscle synergy organization for shoulder muscle
[39] Tropea et al. 2013StrokeAssess changes in motor control after neurorehabilitation6 patients10 healthy subjectsReaching task10 (upper limb)(i) Different muscle synergy organization for shoulder muscle(ii) No difference on muscle synergy organization after rehabilitation
[40] Garcia-Cossio et al. 2014StrokeCharacterize motor control33 patientsMovements of arm and hand8 (upper limb)(i) Correlation between muscle synergies and hand movement functionality
[41] Roh et al. 2015StrokeAssess the upper limb motor dysfunction16 patients10 healthy subjectsIsometric tasks8 (upper limb)(i) Four synergies in both groups(ii) Different muscle synergy organization for shoulder muscle
[42] Hesam-Shariati et al. 2017StrokeUse synergies as severity index24 patientsWii-Baseball game6 (upper limb)(i) Reduced synergies in patients with high pathology severity
[43] Godlove et al. 2016StrokeAssess changes in motor control1 patientReaching tasks8 (upper limb)(i) Abnormal muscle synergy organization and cortical activation in the stroke patient
[44] Li et al. 2017StrokeDefine metrics for assessing motor functions10 patients9 healthy subjectsReaching tasks7 (upper limb)(i) Different muscle synergy organization in patients
[45] Zariffa et al. 2012Spinal cord injuryExamine change in motor control8 patients10 healthy subjectsGripping tasks8 (hand)(i) Different synergies in patients(ii) No correlation with motor ability
[46] Lunardini et al. 2017DystoniaExamine change in motor control9 patients9 healthy childrenWriting tasks8 (upper limb)(i) Similar muscle synergy organization between groups
[47] Gizzi et al. 2015PainExamine change in neck motor control8 healthy subjects with pain inducedReaching tasks12 (trunk and neck)(i) Different synergy organization with and without induced pain
[48] Muceli et al. 2014PainExamine change in motor control8 healthy subjects with pain inducedReaching tasks12 (upper limb)(i) Higher variability of muscle synergy organization with pain
[49] Heales et al. 2016Lateral epicondylalgiaExamine change in coordination of forearm20 patients14 healthy patientsGripping tasks6 (upper limb)(i) Two synergies in both groups(ii) Different muscle synergy organization between groups
[50] Manickaraj et al. 2017Lateral epicondylalgiaExamine change in motor coordination11 patients11 healthy subjectsGripping tasks6 (hand)(i) Reduced synergies in patients(ii) Use of muscle synergies as index to monitor pain
(1) Stroke. We found 9 papers that quantified the abnormalities in muscle coordination, evaluated the effects of therapeutic methods on the modularity of muscle coordination, and examined the neuroanatomical correlates of muscle synergies identified in the upper extremity poststroke. Among them, we reviewed the two following articles, Cheung et al. [36] and Roh et al. [38], considering that both works rigorously characterized abnormal muscle coordination in stroke using different behavioural paradigms. In addition, we reviewed Hesam-Sariati et al. [42] which examined the effects of therapeutic activities on the organization of muscle synergy as well as Godlove et al. [43] which addressed the neural correlates of normal and abnormal muscle synergies identified from a unique stroke case. (2) Stroke: Quantification of Abnormalities in Modular Muscle Coordination. Cheung et al. [36] addressed how stroke affects muscle synergies for human upper limb movements. A group of stroke patients (31) with a wide range of unilateral motor impairment performed multiple upper-limb tasks using both unaffected (control) and affected arms, including seven virtual-reality tasks or a point-to-point reaching task in 3D space. During the task performance, EMG activities were collected from 17 shoulder, upper-arm, and forearm muscles: IS, TMaj, LD, RMaj, TU, PM, DELTa, DELTm, DELTp, TB, TBl, BBl, BBm, BR, BRD, SUP, and PRO. Nonnegative matrix factorization (NMF) identified muscle synergies necessary for an 80% R2 EMG reconstruction. Three distinct patterns of muscle synergies were identified, reflecting preservation, merging, and fractionation of the unaffected-arm muscle synergies in the stroke-affected arm, respectively. Furthermore, authors identified two or more synergies for the impaired arm as fractionations of one or multiple unaffected-arm synergies. Both merging and fractionation of synergies varied as a function of the severity of motor impairment. The findings were congruent with the idea that muscle synergies are structured in the spinal cord, and after cortical stroke, altered descending commands from supraspinal areas generate abnormal motor behaviours through faulty activations of the spinal modules. Overall, these results suggest that muscle synergies may be used as markers of the physiological status of stroke survivors. In contrast to the rest of the existing literature on the topic of stroke upper-extremity muscle synergies that adopted motion or posture-oriented tasks, Roh et al. [38] examined the effects of stroke on the composition and recruitment of muscle synergies underlying the generation of isometric forces at the hand. Ten stroke survivors with severe impairment (FM score < 25/66; data collected from only impaired arm) and six age-matched control subjects (data collected from both arms) participated in the study. EMGs were recorded from shoulder and elbow muscles that include BRD, BB, TBl, TBlat, DELTa, DELTm, DELTp, and PM. By using the NMF algorithm, four synergies were identified. Of the four synergies, synergies with relatively isolated activation of the elbow flexors and extensors were conserved following stroke, respectively. However, the two synergies dominated by the activation of the shoulder muscles were altered. Structural changes in the synergies were consistent with an impaired ability to differentially activate the heads of deltoid. Recruitment of the altered shoulder muscle synergies was strongly associated with abnormal task performance, namely, a requisite rotation of the arm for lateral and upward force directions. The major findings suggest that stroke induces abnormal coordination of muscle activation in stroke survivors with severe impairment by altering the structure of muscle synergies that may contribute to poststroke deficits in the arm function. (3) Stroke: The Effects of Therapy on Muscle Synergies. Hesam-Sariati et al. [42] investigated longitudinal changes in muscle synergies in stroke patients to determine if muscle synergy analysis could distinguish the level of impairment and the effect of therapy. The study cohort consisted of 24 stroke patients in a two-week intensive therapy, 13 of whom were available at the 6-month follow-up session. Each day, patients had 1 hour of formal therapy with an accredited exercise physiologist which was augmented by home practice using the Nintendo Wii-Sports game (Nintendo, Japan). To assess the motor coordination of the subjects, subjects played Wii-Baseball on the game system. Unlike previous studies in coordination, the studied task (simulated baseball swing) was primarily unconstrained. Surface EMG data were collected from 6 muscles on the affected side of the upper body: TM, DELTm, BB, ECR, FCR, and FID. The major results of the study were the following: (i) patients with low motor function had significantly fewer muscle synergies and significantly different distributions of synergy weightings and timings than patients with high motor function had, and (ii) the number of muscle synergies required to recreate the data did not change with time. The low motor function group had roughly three synergies compared to four for the high motor function group, suggesting that there was more complexity in the movements generated by the high motor function group. After training, all of the stroke subjects were able to make significant increases in the clinical motor-function assessments and the game performance in Wii-Baseball without increasing the number of required synergies. The reported findings allow affirming that the assessment of an increase in motor function has to be conducted by means of game performance rather than the use of muscle synergies since they remained unaltered after training. (4) Stroke: Neural Mechanism of Poststroke Muscle Coordination. Godlove et al. [43] addressed how muscle synergies observed after stroke can be related to perilesional cortical activity. Subdural microelectrocorticography (ECoG) signals, recorded from the perilesional cortical area, and EMGs were simultaneously recorded in a stroke subject who suffered from refractory epilepsy and muscle weakness in the affected distal and proximal arm during horizontal reaching movements. Muscle activities were recorded from BRD, BB, TBl, TBlat, DELTa, DELTm, DELTp, and PM. To test the hypothesis that perilesional cortical activity is correlated with the activations of poststroke muscle synergies, NMF was applied to the EMG signal. A mix of both normal and abnormal resultant muscle synergies was surprisingly similar to the set of muscle synergies identified in a previous stroke study [38]. To quantify the cortical correlates of muscle synergy activation, they transformed each ECoG electrode's recorded signal into their component frequencies and power across time. Perilesional high-gamma oscillations, but no other frequency band, were significantly correlated with the activation of both normal and abnormal synergies. Considering the link between ECoG high-gamma activity and synchronized local neural spiking activity at the cortical surface [96, 97], the findings suggest that perilesional spiking may organize synergies after stroke. (5) Pain. Research in both experimentally induced pain (Gizzi et al. [47] and Muceli et al. [48]) and chronic musculoskeletal pain (Heales et al. [49] and Manickaraj et al. [50]) shows that the presence of pain affects muscle recruitment in both the affected muscle and synergistic muscles during a task. In this section, we summarized the findings of Muceli et al. [48], who investigated muscle synergies in reaching a task in an induced pain paradigm, and Manickaraj et al. [50], who investigated muscle synergies in an isometric grip task in patients with chronic lateral epicondylalgia. (6) Pain: Reorganization of Muscle Synergies in Reaching due to Experimentally Induced Pain. Muceli et al. [48] studied the changes in muscle synergies during a planar reaching task to determine if muscle activity remains modular in the presence of pain and if there are similarities between synergies in the pain and no-pain conditions. Eight healthy subjects had experimental muscle pain induced in the anterior deltoid muscle. In each of the four conditions (baseline, control injection, pain injection, and posttest), the subjects performed center-out- and out-center-reaching motions toward 12 evenly spaced targets. During the task, surface EMG data were collected from 12 muscles in the right arm: BRD, ANC, BBl, BBlh, BR, TBl, TBlat, PM, DELTa, DELTm, DELTp, and LD. The major results of the study were as follows: (i) muscle activity in the pain condition was modular; (ii) there was substantial shared information between the examined conditions; and (iii) the dynamic reorganization of the motor signals was subject-specific. In all four conditions, three synergies were required for adequate reconstruction of all subjects. In the pain condition, subjects showed at least two similar synergies from the baseline condition, but the shared synergies varied by subject. The study suggests that subjects recruited a new synergy as opposed to tuning the activation of a previous synergy in the presence of pain. (7) Pain: Quantification of Deficit in Grip Force for Patients with Lateral Epicondylalgia. Manickaraj et al. [50] investigated forearm muscle synergies during a gripping task to determine whether the muscle coordination differed between chronic elbow pain patients and healthy subjects. The study cohort consisted of 11 chronic lateral epicondylalgia patients and a control group of age-, sex-, and limb-matched subjects. Each subject performed an isometric grip at 15% and 30% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) in three different positions (neutral and 20° wrist flexion/extension). During each task, surface EMG data were collected from six muscles in the wrist and fingers: ECR, ECU, EDC, FCR, FCU, and FDS. The major result of the study was that there was a difference in the dimensionality of the synergies between lateral epicondylalgia patients and controls depending upon the magnitude of the grip force but not upon the position of the wrist. At lower levels of grip force, chronic elbow pain patients used only two synergies compared to the three synergies in the control group. The muscle synergies of the chronic elbow pain group had a greater similarity than those of the control group indicating less variability in the coordination. In most cases, the authors found no association between clinical measures and activation level of the muscle synergy. However, at the higher grip force, the pressure pain threshold was correlated with the activation level of the second (less dominant) synergy. The results open the possibility to use the number of synergy as an index to monitor the chronic elbow pain patients considering the difference of the number of synergies between healthy subjects and patients.

3.2. Robotics

We found 40 publications referencing muscle synergies for controlling robotic devices. Taking into account the inclusion criteria, we identified 11 papers for inclusion in this section. Table 7 describes the distribution of the selected papers considering the specific robotic body segment.
Table 7

Papers using muscle synergies in robotics.

N %References
Arm862.50%[5256, 62, 64, 67]
Hand118.75%[61]
Leg218.75%[65, 66]
8 papers, seven related to the robotic arm and one to the robotic hand, are deeply described in the following since they are the only papers that proposed a synergy-based control and that tested it by means of an experimental setup with robotic devices and subjects. Details of all cited papers are reported in Table 8.
Table 8

Selected robotic studies using muscle synergies.

ReferenceRobotAimSubjectsTasksMuscles (segment)Outcomes
[5256] Artemiadis et al. 2006–2012ArmInvestigate the use of low-dimensional EMG for teleoperation of robot3 healthy subjects3D-reaching task9 (upper limb)(i) Feasible robot control with significant EMG data reduction(ii) Possible control in 3D space
[61] Ajoudani et al. 2013HandPropose innovative synergy-based controller2 healthy subjectsGrasping task2 (hand)(i) Synergy-based control able to perform grasping(ii) Synergy-based control adaptable to grasp compliance
[62] Ison et al. 2015ArmPropose an alternative approach for long-term myoelectric control8 healthy subjectsReaching task2 (upper limb)(i) Differences in muscle synergy organization do not influence task performance
[64] Cimolato et al. 2017ArmDescribe a muscle synergy-based control1 healthy subjectReaching task16 (trunk and upper limb)(i) Four synergies to control robot motion(ii) Performance improvement with synergy-based control
[65] Cunha et al. 2016LegDescribe a muscle synergies based controlSimulationOverground walking8 (lower limbs)(i) Two synergies to control six joints(ii) Muscle synergies robust across strides and speeds
[66] Watanabe et al. 2016LegPropose innovative synergy-based controller5 healthy subjectsPedalling16 (lower limbs)(i) Three synergies to control musculoskeletal robot
[67] Lunardini et al. 2016ArmPropose innovative synergy-based controller8 healthy subjectsIsometric contractions8 (lower limb)(i) Repeatable control across days(ii) Robust synergy-based control for arm robot

3.2.1. Robotic Arm

Artemiadis et al. [52-56] have investigated how low-dimensional representations of sEMG signals of the upper limb can be used for the teleoperation of a robot arm in 3D space. Most of the studies were focused on the principal joints of the upper limb, that is, the shoulder and the elbow. A group of nine muscles that are mainly responsible for the studied motion was recorded: DELTa, DELTp, DELTm, PM, PMc, T, BB, BRD, and TB. Three able-bodied subjects were used (three males 27 ± 3 years old); during the experiment, the subjects were standing close to the robot arm, with their neck positioned looking at the front. The results of this study centered around two main issues. Firstly, the dimensionality reduction on the EMG signal was quite significant, since it not only revealed some interesting aspects regarding the 3D movements studied but also aided the matching between the EMG signals and motion since signal correlations were extracted, and the number of variables was drastically reduced. The latter led to the fact that a simple linear model with hidden states proved quite successful in mapping EMG signals to arm motion. The second important result of the study was that it was the first time a continuous profile of the 3D arm motion was extracted using only EMG signals. Most previous works extract only discrete information about motion, while there are some works that estimate continuous arm motion; however, they are constrained to isometric movements, single degrees of freedom (DOF), or very smooth motions. In conclusion, the findings of the studies raised the possibility to control a robot arm by reducing the dimensionality of the EMG signals, which is obtainable via muscle synergies. Lunardini et al. [67] tested a method for controlling a robotic arm with 2 DOF; the control can reproduce the user's motion intention of the extension/flexion elbow and shoulder by using muscle synergies. The main novelty of the paper is the use of a higher number of involved muscles than in previous works, which used only one flexor muscle and one extensor muscle to control robotic arms. More specifically, recorded muscles were BRD, ANC, BB, TB, DELTa, DELTm, DELTp, and SS. Eight healthy subjects (age ranging from 24 to 33 years) were involved in the experimental protocol, which consisted in dynamic unconstrained flexion-extension movements of the elbow and the shoulder in the horizontal plane at different angles during isometric contractions. The entire protocol was repeated two times in two different days. Results showed that the proposed control is efficient in dynamic and isometric tasks and it is also repeatable over days. This study can represent a significant starting point toward the implementation of synergy-based myo-control for assistive robot devices.

3.2.2. Robotic Hand

Ajoudani et al. [61] proposed an innovative synergy-based teleimpedance controller for a robotic hand, that is, the PISA-IIT SoftHand. The complexity of the hand movements was simplified by using motor patterns related to the first synergy, which is associated to the hand opening and closing. This synergy allows the activation of the FDS and the EDC that are the muscles used for grasp. The implemented teleimpedance controller permitted to grasp the hand taking into account the user's postural and synergy profiles in real time. The effectiveness of the novel control method was tested by enrolling two healthy subjects, who were asked to perform 20 grasping tasks at a varying cocontraction level. As reported by the authors, though the results need to be validated with amputees, the findings of this study allow affirming that synergy allows to grasp objects regardless of their elastic properties and to modify the compliance of the grasp via cocontraction.

3.3. Sports

70 papers were found by means of the electronic search in the above-mentioned databases. In addition, 23 further publications were identified using the cross-referencing evaluation. Applying the inclusion criteria, only 19 papers were reported in the present systematic review; in particular, Table 9 shows the distribution of these papers considering the sports involving the application of muscle synergy theory.
Table 9

Papers using muscle synergies in sports.

N %References
Cycling530.00%[68, 69, 74, 86, 87]
Rowing315.00%[70, 71, 81]
Swimming15.00%[82]
Ice hockey15.00%[84]
Fitness525.00%[7780, 83]
Athletics210.00%[73, 85]
Football15.00%[76]
Artistic gymnastics15.00%[72]
Details of all cited papers are reported in Table 10.
Table 10

Selected sport studies using muscle synergies.

ReferenceSportAimSubjectsTasksMuscles (segment)Outcomes
[68] Hug et al. 2010CyclingExamine muscle synergy variability9 cyclistsPedalling10 (lower limb)(i) Similar muscle synergy vectors(ii) Similar activation profiles
[69] Hug et al. 2011CyclingEvaluate the effect of movement mechanics11 cyclistsPedalling11 (lower limb)(i) Training can be performed at low power output
[70] Turpin et al. 2011RowingVerify the effects of power output7 rowers8 untrained subjects2000 m rowing21 (full-body)(i) Similar muscle synergies were found in the two walking conditions
[71] Turpin et al. 2011RowingEvaluate the effect of expertise7 rowers8 untrained subjects2-min rowing23 (full-body)(i) Similar activation profiles between groups(ii) Different muscle synergy vectors between groups
[72] Frère and Hug 2012Artistic gymnasticsExamine muscle synergy variability9 gymnastsBackward giant swings12 (full-body)(i) Three synergies for all subjects(ii) Difference in the third synergy
[73] Frère et al. 2012AthleticsEvaluate the catapult effect on maximum height7 vaulters10 pole vaults10 (upper limbs)(i) Similar activation profiles(ii) Different muscle synergy vectors(iii) No influence on maximum height
[74] De Marchis et al. 2013CyclingInvestigate the muscle coordination9 untrained subjectsPedalling8 (lower limb)(i) More synergies with respect to expertise(ii) Variability of activation profiles(iii) Similarity of muscle synergy vectors
[76] Cruz Ruiz et al. 2015FootballDesign controllers for avatar animation1 footballerRight-hand throws16 (trunk and upper limb)(i) Three synergies for all throws(ii) Repeatable and robust synergies
[77] Kristiansen et al. 2015FitnessEvaluate the effect of expertise10 lifters9 untrained subjectsBench press9 (full-body)(i) Less variability in expert(ii) Use composition of muscle synergies as performance index
[78] Kristiansen et al. 2016FitnessAssess change in motor control after a 5-week training30 untrained subjectsBench press13 (full-body)(i) No difference after training(ii) Higher maximum load after training
[79] Smale et al. 2016FitnessVerify the effect of fatigue9 healthy subjectsTwo-leg squatting12 (lower limb)(i) Difference in muscle synergy composition after fatigue(ii) Muscle synergy as index of fatigue
[80] Kristiansen et al. 2016FitnessEvaluate the between-day reliability21 healthy subjectsBench press13 (full-body)(i) Same muscle synergy organization across days
[81] Shaharudin and Agrawal 2016RowingEvaluate the effect of incremental power output10 rowers10 untrained subjectsRowing16 (full-body)(i) Similar activation profiles between groups(ii) Muscle coordination influence rowing economy
[82] Vaz et al. 2016SwimmingEvaluate the effect of expertise8 swimmers8 beginners25 m breaststroke8 (full-body)(i) No different muscle synergy organization between groups(ii) Different activation time in expert
[83] Chen et al. 2017FitnessInvestigate the intra- and interlimb muscle coordination20 healthy subjectsCrawling32 (full-body)(i) Two synergies for both limbs(ii) Different muscle synergy vectors among speeds
[84] Kim et al. 2017Ice hockeyEvaluate the response to balance perturbation7 expert7 untrained subjectsBalance perturbation16 (full-body)(i) Specific synergy to control head movement in expert
[85] Nishida et al. 2017AthleticsEvaluate the effect of strike patterns10 healthy subjectsRunning12 (trunk and lower limbs)(i) Different synergy vectors, timing, and duration of activation profiles
[86] Turpin et al. 2017CyclingEvaluate the effect of seating and standing position17 untrained subjectsPedalling9 (lower limb)(i) Four synergies for all subjects(ii) Similar muscle synergy organization between positions
[87] Turpin et al. 2017CyclingEvaluate the effect of seating and standing position17 untrained subjectsPedalling7 (trunk and upper limb)(i) Three synergies for all subjects(ii) Greater activation during standing position
The following subparagraphs are organized based on the specific examined sport. In particular, three studies on cycling, two on rowing, and one on swimming, ice hockey, and fitness will be discussed since they are the only ones that proposed tangible outcomes useful for improving athlete performance assessment and/or planning athlete-specific training sessions.

3.3.1. Cycling

In this section, three papers are deeply explained and discussed. The rationale of these papers is to provide useful information on muscle activity by means of muscle synergy theory to improve athlete performance and training. Hug et al. [68] focused on understanding whether trained cyclists recruited the same muscle synergies regardless of the intersubject variability of EMG patterns. Through this scope, they enrolled nine male cyclists who were asked to pedal as long as possible at constant power equal to 80% of the maximum power output, specific for each subject. During the task, EMG signals were recorded from BFlh, GLUmax, SM, VM, RF, VL, GM, GL, SOL, and TA. The authors found that three muscle synergies were sufficient to reconstruct EMG signals for all participants. Muscle synergy vectors and temporal activation patterns showed high mean correlation coefficients and low variance ratio values between subjects. These results can lead to the identification of a locomotor strategy common to the experienced cyclists; thus, recreational cyclists can train themselves to obtain similar muscle recruitment in order to increase their performance. Turpin et al. [86, 87] investigated the advantage of using the standing position during intense cycling with respect to the seated position; in particular, they published two articles focusing on lower and upper limb muscles, respectively. Seventeen male untrained participants were involved in the studies to perform 10–12 s of pedalling in two positions, that is, seated and standing, and six power outputs, that is, 20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, 100%, and 120% of the power, corresponding to the spontaneous transition between the two positions computed in a preliminary test. Activity of 16 muscles was recorded; 9 lower limb muscles (TA, SOL, GM, VL, VM, RF, BFlh, GLUmax, and SEMT) and 7 upper limb muscles (ES, LD, DELTa, TB, BB, BRD, and FD). Four and three muscle synergies were selected for lower and upper limb muscles, respectively. As regards lower limb muscles, the structure of muscle synergies was similar in the two positions, while differences were observed in the timing of extensor activation when the power output reached 600 W. Thus, authors suggested taking advantage of the standing position only when the power output is greater than 600 W. As concern upper limb muscles, a greater activation was observed in standing position; consequently, even though the upper limbs do not produce the power output, coaches and athletes should train interlimb coordination to improve athlete performance.

3.3.2. Rowing

Two articles are resumed in the following to provide important suggestions about the training sessions of rowing. Turpin et al. [70] designed an experimental study to verify if power outputs have effects on muscle synergies during rowing considering both untrained subjects and experienced rowers. Eight untrained male subjects and seven national-level male rowers were involved in the protocol that consisted in 2000 m rowing as fast as possible to individuate the mean power output and 2 min rowing at constant load corresponding to 60%, 90%, and 120% of the mean power output. The following muscles were recorded: TA, SOL, GL, GM, VL, VM, RF, BF, SEMT, GLUmax, LD, ES, TM, BB, L, I, DELTp, TU, TL, TB, and FD. Three muscle synergies were selected for all participants in all power output conditions. Muscle synergy compositions, considering both the muscle synergy vectors and temporal activation patterns, were consistent across the three power outputs; however, a significant increase in the activation of TL and GLUmax was observed increasing the power output. In conclusion, the findings of this study suggest performing training sessions at lower power output with respect to the one used during an official event. Moreover, it should be efficient to further train the TL and GLUmax in terms of endurance force due to the greater activation with the increase of the power output. Shaharudin and Agrawal [81] studied the robustness of the muscle synergies during incremental rowing VO2max, that is, the maximal oxygen consumption, since the aerobic capacity is one of the factors influencing rowing performance. Ten untrained male and ten collegiate male rowers were recruited. All participants performed an incremental ramp test starting at 25 W with increment of 25 W every 30 s. The task was interrupted for volitional exhaustion or if the power output was 10% below the set value for five consecutive rowing cycles. The right side of the body was sensorized applying surface EMG electrodes on SOL, GL, TA, BFlh, SEMT, RF, VL, ES, LD, TM, DELTm, TB, RA, PM, BB, and BRD. Three muscle synergies were sufficient to reconstruct EMG signals for both groups. Although similar temporal activation patterns were observed between the two groups, the strategy of the rower was completely different; in fact, they preferred to row slower with longer cycles. Significant differences on muscle coordination were found based on a different rowing economy. The results of the paper suggest optimizing the muscle coordination during the training stage in order to improve the performance in terms of rowing economy.

3.3.3. Swimming

In this section, we reported the paper of Vaz et al. [82], since it provides useful guidelines for the training of beginner swimmers. Authors compared beginners and elite swimmers in terms of muscle coordination during breaststroke. Eight beginners and eight elites performed 25 m breaststroke at 100% of maximal effort without diving. Muscle patterns were acquired from 8 muscles (TB, BB, TI, PM. GM, TA, BFlh, and RF) on the right side of the body. Three muscle synergies were selected for thirteen out of sixteen participants, while four synergies were recruited for the remaining. No statistical differences were observed by comparing the Variability Account For computed with the subject-specific muscle synergy extraction and the one obtained after the cross-validation procedure; thus, it emerged that synergistic organization of muscle coordination during breaststroke does not depend on expertise. Conversely, four muscles of beginners were characterized by a negative shift in the activation time. From this last outcome, beginners could focus their training especially on the right timing of muscle activation to reach better performance.

3.3.4. Ice Hockey

The paper reported in this section provides useful tools for the training of balance in ice hockey players. Kim et al. [84] studied the differences between elite athletes and nonathletes in terms of muscle activity in response to balance perturbations. Seven female elite athletes and seven female nonathletes were recruited; all participants were asked to stand on a moving platform and to maintain balance during ten trials of unexpected backward perturbation. Muscle activity was gathered from sixteen muscles, more specifically, SCM, EO, ESC, EST, ESL, ADD, RF, VM, TA, TFL, GLUmax, GLUmed, BFlh, PL, GM, and SOL. No significant differences in the number of muscle synergies were observed in both initial and reversal phases between the two examined groups; in the initial phase, muscle synergies ranged from four to eight and from five to six for elite players and nonathletes, respectively, while in the reversal phase, they ranged from six to eight in both groups. During the initial phase, two elite athletes' specific synergies, which were especially related to the control of the head, were found. This outcome could underline a specific ability to control balance when the head position is suddenly changed, as for example in brisk acceleration and deceleration skating. The specific synergies for the control of the head would be considered as a training strategy for female athletes to avoid potential risk of injury caused by external perturbation of the balance.

3.3.5. Fitness

An article reported in this subparagraph provides an index suitable for the evaluation of the athlete performance in bench press exercise. Kristiansen et al. [77] focused their research on the comparison between power lifters and untrained subjects during bench press to understand if the training could influence the muscle synergy variability. They planned an experimental protocol with nine untrained and ten expert power lifters, who were asked to complete three sets of eight repetitions at 60% of the load that was previously computed during three repetitions at the maximum effort. Surface EMG were collected from nine muscles (PM, DELTa, BB, TB, LD, TI, ES, VL, and SOL) of the right side. Two muscle synergies were found for all the participants. However, the expert power lifters demonstrated less variability with respect to the untrained subjects in terms of both muscle synergy vectors and temporal activation patterns, especially during the concentric phase. Due to the obtained outcomes, the inner composition of the muscle synergies can be used as an index for the evaluation of the performance during bench press exercise. Moreover, such results could be interesting for personal trainers in order to customize training based on subjects' level of experience.

4. Conclusion

Understanding how the human brain generates neural commands to control muscles during motor tasks still arouses great interest; in the last decades, the factorization of the EMG signals by means of muscle synergies has been proposed in order to understand the neurophysiological mechanisms related to the central nervous system ability in reducing the dimensionality of the muscle control. This review gives to research groups involved in muscle synergies an overview on tangible applications of this theory in clinics, robotics, and sports. This offers the possibility to inspire new ideas for future works in muscle synergy fields.
  76 in total

1.  Effects of 5 Weeks of Bench Press Training on Muscle Synergies: A Randomized Controlled Study.

Authors:  Mathias Kristiansen; Afshin Samani; Pascal Madeleine; Ernst A Hansen
Journal:  J Strength Cond Res       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 3.775

2.  Matrix factorization algorithms for the identification of muscle synergies: evaluation on simulated and experimental data sets.

Authors:  Matthew C Tresch; Vincent C K Cheung; Andrea d'Avella
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2006-01-04       Impact factor: 2.714

3.  Can modular strategies simplify neural control of multidirectional human locomotion?

Authors:  Karl E Zelik; Valentina La Scaleia; Yuri P Ivanenko; Francesco Lacquaniti
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 2.714

4.  Neuromuscular constraints on muscle coordination during overground walking in persons with chronic incomplete spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Heather B Hayes; Stacie A Chvatal; Margaret A French; Lena H Ting; Randy D Trumbower
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2014-02-14       Impact factor: 3.708

Review 5.  Overweight, obesity, and depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies.

Authors:  Floriana S Luppino; Leonore M de Wit; Paul F Bouvy; Theo Stijnen; Pim Cuijpers; Brenda W J H Penninx; Frans G Zitman
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2010-03

6.  Muscle synergies and complexity of neuromuscular control during gait in cerebral palsy.

Authors:  Katherine M Steele; Adam Rozumalski; Michael H Schwartz
Journal:  Dev Med Child Neurol       Date:  2015-06-17       Impact factor: 5.449

7.  Chronic pain alters spatiotemporal activation patterns of forearm muscle synergies during the development of grip force.

Authors:  Nagarajan Manickaraj; Leanne M Bisset; Venkata S P T Devanaboyina; Justin J Kavanagh
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2017-07-19       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Repeatability of muscle synergies within and between days for typically developing children and children with cerebral palsy.

Authors:  Benjamin Shuman; Marije Goudriaan; Lynn Bar-On; Michael H Schwartz; Kaat Desloovere; Katherine M Steele
Journal:  Gait Posture       Date:  2016-01-28       Impact factor: 2.840

9.  Comparison of muscle synergies for running between different foot strike patterns.

Authors:  Koji Nishida; Shota Hagio; Benio Kibushi; Toshio Moritani; Motoki Kouzaki
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-02-03       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 10.  Quality of life and psychological consequences in elderly patients after a hip fracture: a review.

Authors:  Konstantinos I Alexiou; Andreas Roushias; Sokratis E Varitimidis; Konstantinos N Malizos
Journal:  Clin Interv Aging       Date:  2018-01-24       Impact factor: 4.458

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  15 in total

1.  Myoelectric interface training enables targeted reduction in abnormal muscle co-activation.

Authors:  Marc W Slutzky; Jinsook Roh; Gang Seo; Ameen Kishta; Emily Mugler
Journal:  J Neuroeng Rehabil       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 5.208

Review 2.  Muscle Synergies in Parkinson's Disease.

Authors:  Ilaria Mileti; Alessandro Zampogna; Alessandro Santuz; Francesco Asci; Zaccaria Del Prete; Adamantios Arampatzis; Eduardo Palermo; Antonio Suppa
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-06-05       Impact factor: 3.576

3.  Wearable Inertial Sensors to Assess Gait during the 6-Minute Walk Test: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Fabio Alexander Storm; Ambra Cesareo; Gianluigi Reni; Emilia Biffi
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-05-06       Impact factor: 3.576

Review 4.  A Review of Robot-Assisted Lower-Limb Stroke Therapy: Unexplored Paths and Future Directions in Gait Rehabilitation.

Authors:  Bradley Hobbs; Panagiotis Artemiadis
Journal:  Front Neurorobot       Date:  2020-04-15       Impact factor: 2.650

5.  A Comprehensive Spatial Mapping of Muscle Synergies in Highly Variable Upper-Limb Movements of Healthy Subjects.

Authors:  Alessandro Scano; Luca Dardari; Franco Molteni; Hermes Giberti; Lorenzo Molinari Tosatti; Andrea d'Avella
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2019-09-27       Impact factor: 4.566

6.  Muscle Synergy of the Underwater Undulatory Swimming in Elite Male Swimmers.

Authors:  Yuiko Matsuura; Naoto Matsunaga; Satoshi Iizuka; Hiroshi Akuzawa; Koji Kaneoka
Journal:  Front Sports Act Living       Date:  2020-06-03

7.  Dimensionality analysis of forearm muscle activation for myoelectric control in transradial amputees.

Authors:  Alexander McClanahan; Matthew Moench; Qiushi Fu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Patient-specific functional electrical stimulation strategy based on muscle synergy and walking posture analysis for gait rehabilitation of stroke patients.

Authors:  Junghwan Lim; Taehyun Lim; Jungeun Lee; Junhyuk Sim; Hyungjun Chang; Bumchul Yoon; Hoeryong Jung
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2021-05       Impact factor: 1.671

9.  An Algorithm for Choosing the Optimal Number of Muscle Synergies during Walking.

Authors:  Riccardo Ballarini; Marco Ghislieri; Marco Knaflitz; Valentina Agostini
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-11       Impact factor: 3.576

Review 10.  Critical Appraisal of Surface Electromyography (sEMG) as a Taught Subject and Clinical Tool in Medicine and Kinesiology.

Authors:  Vladimir Medved; Sara Medved; Ida Kovač
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2020-10-26       Impact factor: 4.003

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