DocumentCode
2825547
Title
Force variability during surface contact with bare finger or rigid probe
Author
Lederman, S.J. ; Howe, R.D. ; Klatzky, R.L. ; Hamilton, C.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Psychol., Queen´´s Univ., Kingston, Ont., Canada
fYear
2004
fDate
27-28 March 2004
Firstpage
154
Lastpage
160
Abstract
The current study evaluated subjects\´ ability to control finger force during contact with a smooth plate. They were instructed to maintain a constant "light" or "medium" force when statically contacting the surface or when moving the end effector (finger or rigid probe) back and forth at 20 or 222 mm/s. Subjects pressed harder when using the probe (cf. finger) and during static contact (cf. both motion conditions). Conversely, the coefficient of variation for force (standard deviation/mean) was smallest for static conditions and when the probe is used. Force variability proved to be relatively high in the current experimental conditions, which are typically used during texture discrimination. Despite such variability, psychophysical research has shown that texture discrimination is in fact excellent. This finding markedly contrasts with grasping tasks, where both force control and outcome measures are excellent. We consider a number of implications of these results.
Keywords
end effectors; force control; haptic interfaces; mechanical contact; statistical analysis; finger force; force variability; grasping tasks; motion conditions; psychophysical research; static conditions; static contact; surface contact; texture discrimination; Fingers; Force control; Force feedback; Force measurement; Force sensors; Haptic interfaces; Probes; Psychology; Rough surfaces; Surface roughness;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems, 2004. HAPTICS '04. Proceedings. 12th International Symposium on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2112-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HAPTIC.2004.1287191
Filename
1287191
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