Title :
Subjective Perception and Objective Measurements in Perceiving Object Softness for VR Surgical Systems
Author :
Widmer, Antoine ; Hu, Yaoping
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Calgary, Calgary, AB
Abstract :
A critical issue of virtual reality (VR) surgical systems is to correctly represent both haptic and visual information for distinguishing the softness of organs/tissues. We investigated the relationship between subjective perception of object softness and objective measurements of haptic and visual information. On a co-location VR setup, human subjects pressed deformable balls (simulating organs/tissues) under the conditions of both haptic and visual information available and only haptic (or visual) information available. We recorded and analyzed the subject´s selection (subjective perception) of the harder object between two balls and objective measurements of maximum force (haptic) and pressing depth (visual). The results preliminarily indicated that subjective perception behaves differently from objective measurements in perceiving object softness. This has implications for creating accurate simulation in VR surgical systems.
Keywords :
medical computing; surgery; virtual reality; VR surgical systems; deformable balls; object softness; objective measurements; subjective perception; virtual reality surgical systems; Analysis of variance; Computational modeling; Deformable models; Force measurement; Haptic interfaces; Humans; Pressing; Surgery; Testing; Virtual reality; H.1.2 [Models and Principles]: User/Machine Systems¿Human information processing; I.3.7 [Computer Graphics]: Three-Dimensional Graphics and Realism¿Virtual reality; J.3 [Computer Applications]: Life and Medical Sciences¿Health; Multimodal interaction; haptics; medicine; perception;
Conference_Titel :
Virtual Reality Conference, 2009. VR 2009. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Lafayette, LA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3943-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1087-8270
DOI :
10.1109/VR.2009.4811048