• DocumentCode
    3413624
  • Title

    An investigation of tactile illusion toward tactile displays using psychophysical experiments

  • Author

    Rajaei, N. ; Kawabe, Yoshinobu ; Ohka, Masahiro ; Miyaoka, Tetsu

  • Author_Institution
    Grad. Sch. of Inf. Sci., Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    3-7 July 2011
  • Firstpage
    548
  • Lastpage
    553
  • Abstract
    In this paper, a basic study for breakthrough in tactile presentation technology is described to progress tactile displays using velvet hand illusion (VHI). In the VHI, a person rubs his/her hands together on either side of wires strung through a frame, producing the sensation of rubbing a very smooth and soft surface like velvet. Since in VHI human subjects feel the surface like velvet that does not actually exist, we might develop a new tactile display capable of generating feeling of material based on the mechanism of VHI. The objective of this study is to elucidate this mechanism. We investigate the VHI using frames equipped with two parallel wires and a series of psychophysical experiments. According to the experiments using Thurstone´s Paired Comparison, the strength of VHI depends on the wire distance and movement stroke, and VHI caused by passive touch is considerably stronger than that caused by active touch. This result suggests that VHI is controlled by mechanical external stimulation using tactile displays. Furthermore, we found that the strongest VHI is obtained at movement stroke r being approximately equal to wire distance D. According to the abovementioned results, the mechanism of VHI is assumed as follows: although the area bounded by two wires moves relative to the hands, tangential force does not occur on the hand surface except for wire-passing portion, causing operators to experience the illusion of touching a smooth virtual film with a zero coefficient of friction. Since VHI becomes weaker with a small distance between two adjacent wires or a large movement stroke, excessive tangential stimulation prevents the occurrence of VHI.
  • Keywords
    haptic interfaces; virtual reality; Thurstone paired comparison; VHI; adjacent wires; parallel wires; psychophysical experiments; tactile displays; tactile illusion investigation; tactile presentation technology; velvet hand illusion; virtual film; wires strung; zero coefficient; Actuators; Arrays; Educational institutions; Force; Humans; Vibrations; Wires;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Advanced Intelligent Mechatronics (AIM), 2011 IEEE/ASME International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Budapest
  • ISSN
    2159-6247
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-0838-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AIM.2011.6026985
  • Filename
    6026985