Kaja Balzereit

2papers

2 Papers

2.2LGMay 8
Estimation of Motor Unit Parameters from Surface Electromyograms using an Informed Autoencoder

Kaja Balzereit, Malte Mechtenberg, Axel Schneider

Motor unit parameters such as the innervation zone centre or the conduction velocity of the electrical potential harbour the potential to improve the fidelity of neuromechanical models used for movement and force prediction. Determining these parameters in a non-invasive way is challenging, as they are subject-specific and may vary with muscle contraction. Existing work on the estimation of motor unit parameters mainly relies on white-box modelling and therefore requires substantial manual modelling effort. This work targets the simultaneous estimation of multiple subject-specific motor unit parameters from electromyography (EMG) recordings measured non-invasively at the skin surface. This results in an inverse problem with a nonlinear loss function. To address this problem, an informed autoencoder is developed. This autoencoder reconstructs the surface EMG recordings while learning the parameters in its latent space and adhering to physical laws that relate the parameters to the EMG signals. In experiments on synthetic data, innervation zone centres are estimated with a mean absolute error of 2.5989 $\mathrm{mm}$, and conduction velocities of the electric potential are estimated with a mean absolute error of 0.1697 $\mathrm{m}\mathrm{s}^{-1}$. These results demonstrate the plausibility of this novel approach, which enables the simultaneous estimation of several motor unit parameters while reducing manual modelling effort through the integration of data-driven machine learning.

AIMay 18, 2021
Reconfiguring Hybrid Systems Using SAT

Kaja Balzereit, Oliver Niggemann

Reconfiguration aims at recovering a system from a fault by automatically adapting the system configuration, such that the system goal can be reached again. Classical approaches typically use a set of pre-defined faults for which corresponding recovery actions are defined manually. This is not possible for modern hybrid systems which are characterized by frequent changes. Instead, AI-based approaches are needed which leverage on a model of the non-faulty system and which search for a set of reconfiguration operations which will establish a valid behavior again. This work presents a novel algorithm which solves three main challenges: (i) Only a model of the non-faulty system is needed, i.e. the faulty behavior does not need to be modeled. (ii) It discretizes and reduces the search space which originally is too large -- mainly due to the high number of continuous system variables and control signals. (iii) It uses a SAT solver for propositional logic for two purposes: First, it defines the binary concept of validity. Second, it implements the search itself -- sacrificing the optimal solution for a quick identification of an arbitrary solution. It is shown that the approach is able to reconfigure faults on simulated process engineering systems.