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Vibration Enhances Geometry Perception with Tactile Shape Displays
Tsukuba, Japan March 22-March 24
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/WHC.2007.124Second Joint EuroHaptics Conference a ...
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Mar?a Oyarz?bal, Universidad Polit?cnica de Madrid, Spain
Masashi Nakatani, University of Tokyo, Japan
Robert D. Howe, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
Tactile displays can provide detailed spatial information to the skin, but little is known about the effects of vibrating displayed shapes. This study examines passive touch perception of flat and indented surfaces displayed on a 36 pin tactile display with 2 mm pin pitch. Subjects could not perceive a 0.1 mm deep central indentation when it was presented statically, but it was readily detected when the pattern was vibrated at 5 Hz. A central raised bar was incorrectly perceived as indented when the adjacent pins were vibrated, which is consistent with the ?fishbone tactile illusion? (Nakatani et al., Proc. EuroHaptics 2006). These results suggest that tactile display devices can use vibrational stimulus to enhance perception of small differences in height.
Citation:
Mar?a Oyarz?bal, Masashi Nakatani, Robert D. Howe, "Vibration Enhances Geometry Perception with Tactile Shape Displays," whc, pp.44-49, Second Joint EuroHaptics Conference and Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems (WHC'07), 2007
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