Reliable control of robotic hands using residual muscle activity is challenging due to low-amplitude myoelectric signals, susceptibility to noise, and the need for real-time actuation. This paper presents a myoelectric-controlled robotic hand capable of voluntary independent finger motion. Surface myoelectric signals from the forearm are processed via amplification, filtering, and digital analysis to enable accurate detection of muscle activity. The system achieves independent and simultaneous actuation of five fingers using a tendon-driven, servo-actuated mechanism in a lightweight ABS structure. Experimental evaluation demonstrates finger actuation delays ranging from 314 ms to 650 ms, maximum holding strengths between 1.75 N and 4.07 N, and minimum gripping distances between 22 mm and 49 mm across all five fingers, with peak motor currents remaining below 0.7 A. Results validate consistent muscle activity detection, successful execution of individual and combined finger movements, and the robustness of the proposed design.
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André Moreira
Universidade do Porto
Marco Pinto
European Space Research and Technology Centre
Miguel Fernandes
Intelligent Systems Research (United States)
Machines
Instituto de Telecomunicações
Intelligent Systems Research (United States)
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Moreira et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37bc2b34aaaeb1a67e764 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/machines14030355