DocumentCode :
1484791
Title :
Vibrotactile Stimuli Applied to Finger Pads as Biases for Perceived Inertial and Viscous Loads
Author :
Okamoto, Shogo ; Konyo, Masashi ; Tadokoro, Satoshi
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Sci. & Eng., Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan
Volume :
4
Issue :
4
fYear :
2011
Firstpage :
307
Lastpage :
315
Abstract :
The perception of the mass and viscosity of an object is based on the dynamic forces applied to our hands when we jiggle or lift the object [1], [2], [3]. This force is commonly assumed to be sensed by kinetic receptors [4] in our muscles or tendons. When jiggling objects, we also experience the cutaneous deformation of our finger pads. In this study, we show that the dynamic vibration on the finger pad influences our perception of mass and viscosity. We experimentally confirm that the vibration on the finger pad, that synchronizes with the hand´s accelerations or velocities, enhances the perceived changes in the mass or viscosity when the vibrotactile stimuli and the changes in the mass and viscosity are in the same perceptual direction. For example, when the increased mass and an acceleration-synchronized tactile stimulus-which is a positive bias for the mass-are simultaneously presented to the experiment participants, they respond that the perceived increase in the mass is enhanced. In contrast, when the tactile and proprioceptive stimuli are in perceptually opposite directions, the vibrotactile stimuli cancel the perceived changes in the mass and viscosity. In particular, the effect of the velocity-synchronized vibration on perception is stronger than the effect of the actual viscosity.
Keywords :
haptic interfaces; muscle; vibrations; viscosity; acceleration-synchronized tactile stimulus; cutaneous deformation; dynamic forces; dynamic vibration; finger pads; kinetic receptor; mass perception; muscles; perceived inertial; proprioceptive stimuli; tendons; velocity-synchronized vibration; vibrotactile stimuli; viscosity perception; viscous loads; Acceleration; Force sensors; Synchronization; Vibration measurement; Viscosity; Mass; skin stretch.; vibration; viscosity;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1939-1412
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TOH.2011.16
Filename :
5740879
Link To Document :
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