• DocumentCode
    1819415
  • Title

    Somatosensory anticipation of curvature in a haptic virtual environment

  • Author

    Tramper, Julian J. ; Stephens, Stephen ; Flanders, Martha

  • Author_Institution
    Donders Inst. for Brain, Cognition & Behaviour, Radboud Univ., Nijmegen, Netherlands
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    4-7 March 2012
  • Firstpage
    183
  • Lastpage
    186
  • Abstract
    The human visuomotor system uses predictive mechanisms to allow the eye or hand to efficiently follow a moving target. The long-term goal of the present study is to determine whether the somatosensory system has similar capabilities. Subjects used the right arm to move the index fingertip inside of virtual tubes shaped as large elliptical objects positioned in the frontal plane. The virtual ellipses had three different aspect ratios and two different tilts, and some had flattened portions inserted in one of three regions. Each of the 24 virtual shapes was presented only once to each subject, but the subject explored each one by moving in five consecutive laps. Performance was more improved over the laps when subjects were allowed to stay in constant contact with the walls of the tube, rather than attempting to stay off the walls. However, even with this continuous haptic feedback, subjects could not precisely anticipate the timing of an upcoming flattened region. Thus, similar to recent results for visually-guided eye movements, it appears that it is difficult for the haptic guidance system to time the anticipation of an upcoming event.
  • Keywords
    haptic interfaces; mechanoception; pipes; virtual reality; visual perception; elliptical objects; flattened region; frontal plane; haptic feedback; haptic guidance system; haptic virtual environment; human visuomotor system; index fingertip; predictive mechanisms; somatosensory curvature anticipation; virtual ellipses; virtual shapes; virtual tubes; visually-guided eye movements; walls; Clocks; Feature extraction; Haptic interfaces; Materials; Navigation; Shape; active sensing; touch;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Haptics Symposium (HAPTICS), 2012 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Vancouver, BC
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-0808-3
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4673-0807-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HAPTIC.2012.6183788
  • Filename
    6183788