Identifying muscle synergies from reaching and grasping movements in rats

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Abstract

Reaching and grasping (RG) is a skilled voluntary movement which is critical for animals. In this work, we aim to identify muscle synergy patterns from RG movements in rats and show how these patterns can be used to characterize such movements and investigate their consistency and repeatability. For that purpose, we analyzed the electromyographic (EMG) activity of five forelimb muscles recorded while the animals were engaged in RG tasks. Our dataset included 200 RG attempts from three different rats. Non-negative matrix factorization was used to decompose EMG signals and extract muscle synergies. We compared all pairs of attempts and created cross-validated models to study intra- and inter-subject variability. We found that three synergies were enough to accurately reconstruct the EMG envelopes. These muscle synergies and their corresponding activation coefficients were very similar for all the attempts in the database, providing a general pattern to describe the movement. Results suggested that the movement strategy adopted by an individual in its different attempts was highly repetitive, but also resembled the strategies adopted by the other animals. Inter-subject variability was not much higher than intra-subject variability. This study is a proof-of-concept, but the proposed approaches can help to establish whether there is a stereotyped pattern of neuromuscular activity in RG movement in healthy rats, and the changes that occur in animal models of acute neurological injuries. Research on muscle synergies could elucidate motor control mechanisms, and lead to quantitative tools for evaluating upper limb motor impairment after an injury.

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Castillo-Escario, Y., Rodriguez-Canon, M., Garcia-Alias, G., & Jane, R. (2020). Identifying muscle synergies from reaching and grasping movements in rats. IEEE Access, 8, 62517–62530. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.2984471

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