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Wireless, Wrist‐Worn Ultraconformal Neuromuscular Interfaces for Thumb‐Controlled Immersive Human–Machine Interactions

Chengjun Wang, Wei Hong, Yidong Deng, Lingyi Lan, Shun Zhang, Jianfeng Ping, Yibin Ying, Cunjiang Yu, Jikui Luo, Weiqiu Chen, Zuobing Chen, Jizhou Song

2025Advanced Functional Materials9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Thumb actions, outperforming conventional methods such as hand gestures or wrist gestures in terms of dexterity, agility and intuitiveness, have long been sought‐after for achieving immersive interactive experiences in robotic control and AR/VR platforms. However, accurate mapping of such dynamic, subtle thumb actions remains a difficult challenging. Here, a wireless, wrist‐affixed soft ultra‐conformal neuromuscular interface system (UniSyst) is reported to capture high‐fidelity surface electromyography crucial for decoding dynamic subtle thumb actions. The UniSyst, which can be easily fabricated at scale and in mass quantities, features a 16‐channel soft, stretchable sensing array for broad, high‐resolution data capture and a stiff design for plug‐and‐play interface with external rigid wireless acquisition module. This soft‐stiff design ensures consistent electrode‐skin contact under substantial skin deformations, thus avoiding undesired motion artifacts commonly observed with rigid alternatives. Facilitated with a lightweight 1D convolution neural network deep learning classifier, this system shows remarkable recognition accuracy over that of traditional forearm placements, fairly compared through concurrently collected signals from the wrist and the forearm of 12 participants. In practical scenarios, the soft UniSyst exhibits rapid, precise thumb‐controlled interactive capabilities, adeptly managing human–machine communications in both digital platforms and immersive gaming controls.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceWirelessThumbWristHuman–machine systemHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceTelecommunicationsBiologyAnatomyMuscle activation and electromyography studiesEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesHand Gesture Recognition Systems