DocumentCode
775582
Title
Factors Influencing Haptic Perception of Complex Shapes
Author
Ehrich, J.M. ; Flanders, M. ; Soechting, J.F.
Author_Institution
Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA
Volume
1
Issue
1
fYear
2008
Firstpage
19
Lastpage
26
Abstract
Exploration of an object by arm movement and somatosensation is a serial process that relies on memories and expectations. The present experiments tested the hypothesis that this process involves breaking the object into component shapes (primitives). This was tested by having human subjects explore shapes composed of semicircular arcs as well as quarter circles or quarter ellipses. The subjects´ perception was reported using a visual display. In the first experiment, in which a series of semicircular arcs was presented, with offsets that differed from trial to trial, performance was consistent with the perception of two (left and right) semicircles. In the second experiment, subjects often failed to detect the quarter circles or quarter ellipses and again behaved as if the object was composed of two (top and bottom) semicircles. The results suggest that the synthesis of haptically sensed shapes is biased toward simple geometric objects, and that it can be strongly influenced by expectations.
Keywords
computer displays; haptic interfaces; arm movement; complex shapes; component shapes; haptic perception; serial process; somatosensation; visual display; Displays; Haptic interfaces; Humans; Image recognition; Image segmentation; Joining processes; Object detection; Shape; Testing; Cognition; Human performance; Perception and psychophysics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1939-1412
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TOH.2008.4
Filename
4553729
Link To Document