• DocumentCode
    970967
  • Title

    Designing for Feel: Contrasts between Human and Automated Parametric Capture of Knob Physics

  • Author

    Swindells, Colin ; MacLean, Karon E. ; Booth, Kellogg S.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
  • Volume
    2
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2009
  • Firstpage
    200
  • Lastpage
    211
  • Abstract
    We examine a crucial aspect of a tool intended to support designing for feel: the ability of an objective physical-model identification method to capture perceptually relevant parameters, relative to human identification performance. The feel of manual controls, such as knobs, sliders, and buttons, becomes critical when these controls are used in certain settings. Appropriate feel enables designers to create consistent control behaviors that lead to improved usability and safety. For example, a heavy knob with stiff detents for a power plant boiler setting may afford better feedback and safer operations, whereas subtle detents in an automobile radio volume knob may afford improved ergonomics and driver attention to the road. To assess the quality of our identification method, we compared previously reported automated model captures for five real mechanical reference knobs with captures by novice and expert human participants who were asked to adjust four parameters of a rendered knob model to match the feel of each reference knob. Participants indicated their satisfaction with the matches their renderings produced. We observed similar relative inertia, friction, detent strength, and detent spacing parameterizations by human experts and our automatic estimation methods. Qualitative results provided insight on users´ strategies and confidence. While experts (but not novices) were better able to ascertain an underlying model in the presence of unmodeled dynamics, the objective algorithm outperformed all humans when an appropriate physical model was used. Our studies demonstrate that automated model identification can capture knob dynamics as perceived by a human, and they also establish limits to that ability; they comprise a step towards pragmatic design guidelines for embedded physical interfaces in which methodological expedience is informed by human perceptual requirements.
  • Keywords
    ergonomics; friction; handles; identification; automated parametric capture; automatic estimation method; detent spacing parameterization; detent strength; ergonomics improvement; friction; human experts estimation methods; human identification performance; inertia; knob dynamics; knob physics; mechanical reference knobs; objective physical model identification method; rendered knob model parameter; Haptic I/O; evaluation/methodology; human factors; software psychology.;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1939-1412
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TOH.2009.23
  • Filename
    5010437