Table 1.
Term | Definition | Effect on sEMG Signal |
---|---|---|
sEMG sensor 1 (often confused with the commercial term “electrode”) | System carrying and including the electrode(s) and their fixation system (e.g., adhesive rings) | Adhesive disks or straps might limit skin elasticity and create artifacts due to micromovements. |
Electrode (or electrode sensitive area) | Conductive surface in contact with the skin (dry or wet, e.g., gel) |
The voltage distribution on the skin under the electrode takes a single instantaneous value over the entire electrode (average in space). causing lowpass filtering. |
sEMG sensor diameter or size | Diameter or size of the whole sensor applied over the skin | Large sEMG sensors require wide inter-electrode distance |
Center to center inter-electrode distance (IED) | Distance between electrode centers | Larger IED results in larger detection volume and larger sEMG signal, which is often incorrectly considered a good thing, with the risk of crosstalk |
Detection volume | Volume and shape of the region of 3D space containing motor units whose potential can be detected | Region containing motor units whose potentials are above the noise level. |
Crosstalk | Signal detected on the target muscle but generated by the motor units of another muscle |
When nearby muscles are active the muscle of interest seems to be active, leading to wrong conclusions/decisions.Crosstalk may critically affect clinical decision making |
Innervation zone (IZ) | Physical region where the central (alpha-motor neuron terminations) and peripheral (muscle fibers) systems connect through special synapses [14] | During dynamic contractions, the relative movement of the muscle with respect to the skin (that is the electrode system) determines a strong alteration (e.g., reduction) of the signal amplitude when the IZ shifts under the electrode pair [14] |
1 As defined in the SENIAM recommendations.