Sensors (Feb 2024)

Detecting Psychological Interventions Using Bilateral Electromyographic Wearable Sensors

  • Yedukondala Rao Veeranki,
  • Sergi Garcia-Retortillo,
  • Zacharias Papadakis,
  • Andreas Stamatis,
  • Kwadwo Osei Appiah-Kubi,
  • Emily Locke,
  • Ryan McCarthy,
  • Ahmed Ali Torad,
  • Ahmed Mahmoud Kadry,
  • Mostafa Ali Elwan,
  • Ali Boolani,
  • Hugo F. Posada-Quintero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s24051425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 5
p. 1425

Abstract

Read online

This study investigated the impact of auditory stimuli on muscular activation patterns using wearable surface electromyography (EMG) sensors. Employing four key muscles (Sternocleidomastoid Muscle (SCM), Cervical Erector Muscle (CEM), Quadricep Muscles (QMs), and Tibialis Muscle (TM)) and time domain features, we differentiated the effects of four interventions: silence, music, positive reinforcement, and negative reinforcement. The results demonstrated distinct muscle responses to the interventions, with the SCM and CEM being the most sensitive to changes and the TM being the most active and stimulus dependent. Post hoc analyses revealed significant intervention-specific activations in the CEM and TM for specific time points and intervention pairs, suggesting dynamic modulation and time-dependent integration. Multi-feature analysis identified both statistical and Hjorth features as potent discriminators, reflecting diverse adaptations in muscle recruitment, activation intensity, control, and signal dynamics. These features hold promise as potential biomarkers for monitoring muscle function in various clinical and research applications. Finally, muscle-specific Random Forest classification achieved the highest accuracy and Area Under the ROC Curve for the TM, indicating its potential for differentiating interventions with high precision. This study paves the way for personalized neuroadaptive interventions in rehabilitation, sports science, ergonomics, and healthcare by exploiting the diverse and dynamic landscape of muscle responses to auditory stimuli.

Keywords