Literature DB >> 7642190

Estimation of shape characteristics of surface muscle signal spectra from time domain data.

R Merletti1, A Gulisashvili, L R Lo Conte.   

Abstract

Myoelectric manifestations of muscle fatigue have been described by monitoring the first-order moment (mean frequency) of the power spectral density function during voluntary or electrically elicited sustained contractions. Higher order central moments provide additional information about the width, skewness, and kurtosis of the spectrum and its shape changes, thereby providing a description of slow nonstationarities more accurate than that allowed by the mean frequency alone. In 1986, B. Saltzberg introduced a method of representing the moments of the power spectral density function of band limited signals, without computing the Fourier transform, as weighted sums of samples of the autocorrelation function. If we allow for oversampling of the signal (and therefore of its autocorrelation function), more efficient weighted sums can be found which give Saltzberg's formula as a limiting case. The faster rate of decay of the weights implies a faster convergence of the estimates and the need to compute fewer samples of the autocorrelation function. The algorithm is particularly suitable for: 1) analysis of evoked potentials (M-waves), because it does not need zero padding to increase resolution and operates on any number of samples, and 2) on-line implementation by dedicated microprocessors performing simultaneous spectral moment analysis on a number of parallel channels.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7642190     DOI: 10.1109/10.398637

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng        ISSN: 0018-9294            Impact factor:   4.538


  3 in total

1.  Estimation of surface electromyogram spectral alteration using reduced-order autoregressive model.

Authors:  S Karlsson; J Yu
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 2.602

2.  Spectral moments of mechanomyographic signals recorded with accelerometer and microphone during sustained fatiguing contractions.

Authors:  Pascal Madeleine; Hong-You Ge; Anna Jaskólska; Dario Farina; Artur Jaskólski; Lars Arendt-Nielsen
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2006-03-22       Impact factor: 2.602

3.  The effects of head movement on dual-axis cervical accelerometry signals.

Authors:  Ervin Sejdić; Catriona M Steele; Tom Chau
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2010-10-26
  3 in total

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