DocumentCode
70934
Title
Evaluating Vibrotactile Dimensions for the Design of Tactons
Author
Azadi, Mehdi ; Jones, Lucas A.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume
7
Issue
1
fYear
2014
fDate
Jan.-March 2014
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
23
Abstract
Vibrotactile stimuli are defined in terms of their amplitude, frequency, waveform and temporal profile all of which have been varied to create tactons. A number of approaches have been adopted to design tactons including multidimensional scaling, iterative empirical methods and using perceptual processing models. The objective of the present set of experiments was to create sets of tactons based on the properties of the dimensions of vibrotactile stimuli. An absolute identification paradigm was used in which each of nine tactons was presented eight times using a tactor mounted on either the index finger or forearm. It was found that tactons created by varying the frequency, amplitude and temporal profile of the vibrotactile stimuli were correctly identified on 73-83 percent of the trials, with a mean information transfer of 2.41 bits. The latter metric indicates that for these sets of nine tactons between five and six could be reliably identified. The vibrotactile stimuli delivered in the experiments were identified as consistently on the forearm as the hand and the IT values were similar at the two locations. This suggests that sites other than the hand can be used effectively in tactile communication systems and that it is channel capacity that ultimately determines performance on this type of task.
Keywords
haptic interfaces; iterative methods; tactile sensors; user centred design; absolute identification paradigm; amplitude profile; channel capacity; frequency profile; iterative empirical method; multidimensional scaling; perceptual processing model; tactile communication systems; tactons design; tactor; temporal profile; vibrotactile dimension; vibrotactile stimuli; Actuators; Frequency measurement; Frequency modulation; Indexes; Skin; Thumb; Haptic I/O; human information processing; input devices and strategies; user-centered design;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1939-1412
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TOH.2013.2296051
Filename
6718121
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