A Hand Gesture Recognition Circuit Utilizing an Analog Voting Classifier

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Abstract

Electromyography is a diagnostic medical procedure used to assess the state of a muscle and its related nerves. Electromyography signals are monitored to detect neuromuscular abnormalities and diseases but can also prove useful in decoding movement-related signals. This information is vital to controlling prosthetics in a more natural way. To this end, a novel analog integrated voting classifier is proposed as a hand gesture recognition system. The voting classifiers utilize 3 separate centroid-based classifiers, each one attached to a different electromyographic electrode and a voting circuit. The main building blocks of the architecture are bump and winner-take-all circuits. To confirm the proper operation of the proposed classifier, its post-layout classification results (91.2% accuracy) are compared to a software-based implementation (93.8% accuracy) of the same voting classifier. A TSMC 90 nm CMOS process in the Cadence IC Suite was used to design and simulate the following circuits and architectures.

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Alimisis, V., Mouzakis, V., Gennis, G., Tsouvalas, E., Dimas, C., & Sotiriadis, P. P. (2022). A Hand Gesture Recognition Circuit Utilizing an Analog Voting Classifier. Electronics (Switzerland), 11(23). https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics11233915

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