DocumentCode
3103009
Title
Discrimination of thermal diffusivity
Author
Tiest, Wouter M Bergmann ; Kappers, Astrid M L
Author_Institution
Helmholtz Inst., Utrecht Univ., Utrecht
fYear
2009
fDate
18-20 March 2009
Firstpage
635
Lastpage
639
Abstract
Materials such as wood or metal which are at equal temperatures are perceived to be of different ldquocoldnessrdquo due to differences in thermal properties, such as the thermal diffusivity. The thermal diffusivity of a material is a parameter that controls the rate with which heat is extracted from the hand when it touches an object of that material. This rate of heat extraction is an important cue for distinguishing materials and recognising objects by means of touch. We have measured the ability of human observers to discriminate between different rates of heat extraction. This was done using a device that displayed different transient temperature profiles to the finger. In different conditions, subjects were repeatedly asked to select the faster-cooling of two stimuli. The discrimination threshold was around 43% of the extraction rate. A rate that was twice as slow also yielded twice the absolute discrimination threshold. When we halved the temperature difference between beginning and end of the stimulus, the threshold did not change as much. This shows that subjects can use the rate of heat extraction as a cue and that they can discriminate between materials if their thermal diffusivities are at least 43% apart.
Keywords
haptic interfaces; metals; thermal diffusivity; touch (physiological); wood; coldness; heat extraction; metal; thermal diffusivity; wood; Conducting materials; Fingers; Geometry; Haptic interfaces; Heat sinks; Humans; Inorganic materials; Skin; Temperature sensors; Thermal conductivity;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
EuroHaptics conference, 2009 and Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems. World Haptics 2009. Third Joint
Conference_Location
Salt Lake City, UT
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3858-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/WHC.2009.4810809
Filename
4810809
Link To Document