Title :
The Sampling Position Within, Not the Undulating Geometry of, Fingertip Skin Microstructure May Amplify the Sensation of Edges
Author :
Gerling, Gregory J.
Author_Institution :
Department of Systems and Information Engineering, University of Virginia, USA, email: gregory-gerling@virginia.edu
Abstract :
The skin plays a role in conditioning imposed indentation at its surface into distributions of stress/strain that underlying mechanoreceptors convert into neural signals. Solid mechanics techniques may help explain how skin microstructure, in particular the intermediate ridges, influence the SA-I mechanoreceptors’ sensitivity to edge and curvature stimuli. This investigation isolates two facets of intermediate ridge microstructure, the stress/strain sampling position relative to the epidermal-dermal a) material boundary and b) undulating interface geometry. The objective of this study is to determine the relative importance of each for amplifying sampled stress/strain. The following finite element analysis finds that undulating interface geometry provides no amplification advantage. Rather, the imperative factor for amplifying stress/strain is the positioning of the sampling points in the stiffer, epidermal material just above the material boundary. These results may help explain the SA-I receptors’ positioning and inform the future design of man-made, electro-mechanical tactile sensors.
Keywords :
SA-I; fingertip; finite element model; mechanoreceptor; sensation; skin microstructure; tactile; Capacitive sensors; Epidermis; Finite element methods; Geometry; Microstructure; Sampling methods; Skin; Solids; Stress; Tactile sensors; SA-I; fingertip; finite element model; mechanoreceptor; sensation; skin microstructure; tactile;
Conference_Titel :
Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems, 2006 14th Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0226-3
DOI :
10.1109/HAPTIC.2006.1627065