Title :
Sensory augmentation of stiffness using fingerpad skin stretch
Author :
Zhan Fan Quek ; Schorr, Samuel ; Nisky, Ilana ; Okamura, Allison M. ; Provancher, William
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract :
When interacting with everyday objects, we experience kinesthetic force feedback as well as various forms of cutaneous tactile feed-back. Skin stretch is part of the cutaneous tactile experience that is caused by friction between the skin and the grasped object. Interacting with stiffer objects causes larger force, and results in a larger amount of skin stretch. Therefore, we hypothesize that adding artificial fingerpad skin stretch to kinesthetic force feedback will increase users´ perception of stiffness. A tactile display called the Skin Stretch Stylus was designed to augment kinesthetic force feedback with skin stretch feedback. The change in users´ stiffness perception due to the addition of skin stretch feedback is quantified through a two-alternative forced-choice paradigm, method of constant stimuli experiment. In this experiment, subjects compared the stiffness of virtual springs with kinesthetic force feedback augmented with skin stretch feedback versus virtual springs with only kinesthetic force feedback. Results show that the addition of skin stretch causes a significant increase in the perception of stiffness, and this effect increases with higher amount of applied skin stretch. These results indicate that skin stretch feedback could be used to augment perceived stiffness in situations where it is not possible to increase force feedback gains. Such scenarios include teleoperation systems where force feedback gains must remain low to ensure stability, and haptic devices with limited actuator force.
Keywords :
force feedback; haptic interfaces; human computer interaction; stability; telecontrol; Skin Stretch Stylus; actuator force; artificial fingerpad skin stretch; cutaneous tactile experience; cutaneous tactile feedback; force feedback gain; forced-choice paradigm; haptic device; kinesthetic force feedback; method of constant stimuli experiment; object interaction; sensory augmentation; skin stretch feedback; skin-grasped object friction; stability; tactile display; teleoperation system; user stiffness perception; virtual spring stiffness; Apertures; Force; Force feedback; Phantoms; Rendering (computer graphics); Skin; H.5.2 [Information Interfaces and Presentation]: User Interfaces-Haptic I/O; J.4 [Social and Behavioral Science]: Psychology;
Conference_Titel :
World Haptics Conference (WHC), 2013
Conference_Location :
Daejeon
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0087-9
DOI :
10.1109/WHC.2013.6548453