The procedure by which a measurement obtained from a particular muscle and subject is expressed as a percentage or proportion of a reference measurement obtained from the same muscle and subject. For example, the amplitude of an EMG signal might be expressed as a fraction of the EMG signal amplitude recorded during an MVC of the same subject.Normalization of the EMG amplitude to a reference value enables comparisons between subjects/muscles/measurement sessions/ electrode positions, etc. To interpret and compare the RMS or ARV amplitude of EMG signals they must be normalized, as a number of factors that are unrelated to muscle activity can influence the recorded voltage (e.g., thickness of subcutaneous layers).
(McManus et al., 2021)Let us know how helpful you found the recommendations above and how we can improve: