• DocumentCode
    741727
  • Title

    Human Force Discrimination during Active Arm Motion for Force Feedback Design

  • Author

    Feyzabadi, Seyedshams ; Straube, Sirko ; Folgheraiter, M. ; Kirchner, Elsa Andrea ; Su Kyoung Kim ; Albiez, J.C.

  • Author_Institution
    Robot. Innovation Center, German Res. Center for Artificial Intell., Bremen, Germany
  • Volume
    6
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2013
  • Firstpage
    309
  • Lastpage
    319
  • Abstract
    The goal of this study was to analyze the human ability of external force discrimination while actively moving the arm. With the approach presented here, we give an overview for the whole arm of the just-noticeable differences (JNDs) for controlled movements separately executed for the wrist, elbow, and shoulder joints. The work was originally motivated in the design phase of the actuation system of a wearable exoskeleton, which is used in a teleoperation scenario where force feedback should be provided to the subject. The amount of this force feedback has to be calibrated according to the human force discrimination abilities. In the experiments presented here, 10 subjects performed a series of movements facing an opposing force from a commercial haptic interface. Force changes had to be detected in a two-alternative forced choice task. For each of the three joints tested, perceptual thresholds were measured as absolute thresholds (no reference force) and three JNDs corresponding to three reference forces chosen. For this, we used the outcome of the QUEST procedure after 70 trials. Using these four measurements we computed the Weber fraction. Our results demonstrate that different Weber fractions can be measured with respect to the joint. These were 0.11, 0.13, and 0.08 for wrist, elbow, and shoulder, respectively. It is discussed that force perception may be affected by the number of muscles involved and the reproducibility of the movement itself. The minimum perceivable force, on average, was 0.04 N for all three joints.
  • Keywords
    force feedback; haptic interfaces; human factors; muscle; psychology; wearable computers; JND; QUEST procedure; Weber fraction; active arm motion; actuation system design phase; commercial haptic interface; elbow joints; external force discrimination; force feedback design; human ability analysis; human force discrimination abilities; just-noticeable differences; movement reproducibility; muscles; perceivable force; perceptual thresholds; shoulder joints; teleoperation scenario; two-alternative forced choice task; wearable exoskeleton; wrist joints; Elbow; Force; Force feedback; Force measurement; Humans; Joints; Wrist; Perception; biorobotics; human factors; psychophysics; wearable computers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1939-1412
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TOH.2013.4
  • Filename
    6461372