Effects of transcranial electrical stimulation on intermuscular coherence in WuShu sprint and KAN-based EMG-performance function fitting
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine how transcranial electrical stimulation (tES) modulates intermuscular coherence (IMC) in sprinters and develop an interpretable neural network model for performance prediction.
Methods: Thirty elite sprinters completed a randomized crossover trial involving three tES conditions: motor cortex stimulation (C1/C2), prefrontal stimulation (F3), and sham. Sprint performance metrics (0-100 m phase analysis) and lower-limb sEMG signals were collected. A Kolmogorov-Arnold Network (KAN) was trained to decode neuromuscular coordination-sprint performance relationships using IMC and time-frequency sEMG features.
Results: Motor cortex tDCS increased 30-60 m sprint velocity by 2.2% versus sham (p < 0.05, ?2 = 0.25). ?-band IMC in key muscle pairs (rectus femoris-biceps femoris, tibialis anterior-gastrocnemius) significantly heightened under motor cortex stimulation (F > 4.2, p < 0.03). The KAN model achieved high predictive accuracy (R2 = 0.83) through cross-validation, with derived symbolic equations mapping neuromuscular features to performance.
Conclusions: Targeted tDCS enhances neuromuscular coordination and sprint velocity, while KAN provides a transparent framework for performance modeling in elite sports.
© Copyright 2025 Sensors. All rights reserved.
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| Notations: | endurance sports technical and natural sciences biological and medical sciences |
| Tagging: | neuronale Netze |
| Published in: | Sensors |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2025
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.3390/s25196241 |
| Volume: | 25 |
| Issue: | 19 |
| Pages: | 6241 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |