Everyday, people interact with different types of human machine interfaces, and the use of them is increasing, thus, it is necessary to design interfaces which are capable of responding in an intelligent, natural, inexpensive, and accessible way, regardless of social, cultural, economic, or physical features of a user. In this sense, it has been sought out the development of small interfaces to avoid any type of user annoyance. In this paper, bioelectric signals have been analyzed and characterized in order to propose a more natural human-machine interaction system. The proposed scheme is controlled by electromyographic signals that a person can create through arm movements. Such arm signals have been analyzed and characterized by a back-propagation neural network, and by a wavelet analysis, in this way control commands were obtained from such arm electromyographic signals. The developed interface, uses Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) to send control commands remotely. In the experiment, it manipulated a vehicle that was approximately 52 km away from the user, with which it can be showed that a characterized electromyographic signal can be sufficient for controlling embedded devices such as a Raspberri Pi, and in this way we can use the neural network and the wavelet analysis to generate control words which can be used inside the Internet of Things too. A Tiva-C board has been used to acquire data instead of more popular development boards, with an adequate response. One of the most important aspects related to the proposed interface is that it can be used by almost anyone, including people with different abilities and even illiterate people. Due to the existence of individual efforts to characterize different types of bioelectric signals, we propose the generation of free access Bioelectric Control Dictionary, to define and consult each characterized biosignal.
Around the world many people loss a body member for many reasons, where advances of technology may be useful to help these people to improve the quality of their lives. Then, designing a technologically advanced prosthesis with natural movements is worthy for scientific, commercial, and social reasons. Thus, research of manufacturing, designing, and signal processing may lead up to a low-cost affordable prosthesis. This manuscript presents a low-cost design proposal for an electromyographic electronic system, which is characterized by a neural network based process. Moreover, a hand-type prosthesis is presented and controlled by using the processed electromyographic signals for a required particular use. For this purpose, the user performs several movements by using the healthy-hand to get some electromyographic signals. After that, the obtained signals are processed in a neural network based controller. Once an usable behavior is obtained, an exact replica of controlled motions are adapted for the other hand by using the designed prosthesis. The characterization process of bioelectrical signals was performed by training twenty characteristics obtained from the original raw signal in contrast with other papers in which seven characteristics have been tested on average. The proposed model reached a 95.2% computer test accuracy and 93% accuracy in a real environment experiment. The platform was tested via online and offline, where the best response was obtained in the online execution time.
Cryptographic algorithms (RSA, DSA, and ECC) use modular exponentiation as part of the principal operation. However, Non-profiled Side Channel Attacks such as Simple Power Analysis and Differential Power Analysis compromise cryptographic algorithms that use such operation. In this work, we present a modification of a modular exponentiation algorithm implemented in programmable devices, such as the Field Programmable Gate Array, for which we use Virtex-6 and Artix-7 evaluation boards. It is shown that this proposal is not vulnerable to the attacks mentioned previously. Further, a comparison was made with other related works, which use the same family of FPGAs. These comparisons show that this proposal not only defeats physical attack but also reduces the number of resources. For instance, the present work reduces the Look-Up Tables by 3550 and the number of Flip-Flops was decreased by 62,583 compared with other works. Besides, the number of memory blocks used is zero in the present work, in contrast with others that use a large number of blocks. Finally, the clock cycles (latency) are compared in different programmable devices to perform operations.
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