RESUMEN
Multiple human sensory systems exhibit sensitivity to spatial and temporal variations of physical stimuli. Vision has evolved to offer high spatial acuity with limited temporal sensitivity, while audition has developed complementary characteristics. Neural coding in touch has been believed to transition from a spatial to a temporal domain in relation to surface scale, such that coarse features (e.g., a braille cell or corduroy texture) are coded as spatially distributed signals, while fine textures (e.g., fine-grit sandpaper) are encoded by temporal variation. However, the interplay between the two domains is not well understood. We studied tactile encoding with a custom-designed pin array apparatus capable of deforming the fingerpad at 5 to 80 Hz in each of 14 individual locations spaced 2.5 mm apart. Spatial variation of skin indentation was controlled by moving each of the pins at the same frequency and amplitude, but with phase delays distributed across the array. Results indicate that such stimuli enable rendering of shape features at actuation frequencies up to 20 Hz. Even at frequencies > 20 Hz, however, spatial variation of skin indentation continues to play a vital role. In particular, perceived roughness is affected by spatial variation within the fingerpad even at 80 Hz. We provide evidence that perceived roughness is encoded via a summary measure of skin displacement. Relative displacements in neighboring pins of less than 10 µm generate skin stretch, which regulates the roughness percept.
Asunto(s)
Percepción del Tacto , Humanos , Piel , Tacto/fisiologíaRESUMEN
We used broadband electroadhesion to reproduce the friction force profile measured as a finger slid across a textured surface. In doing so, we were also able to reproduce with high fidelity the skin vibrations characteristic of that texture; however, we found that this did not reproduce the original perception. To begin, the reproduction felt weak. In order to maximize perceptual similarity between a real texture and its friction force playback, the vibratory magnitude of the latter must be scaled up on average ≈ 3X for fine texture and ≈ 5X for coarse texture samples. This additional gain appears to correlate with perceived texture roughness. Additionally, even with optimal scaling and high fidelity playback, subjects could identify which of two reproductions corresponds to a real texture with only 71 % accuracy, as compared to 95 % accuracy when using real texture alternatives. We conclude that while tribometry and vibrometry data can be useful for texture classification, they appear to contribute only partially to texture perception. We propose that spatially distributed excitation of skin within the fingerpad may play an additional key role, and may thus be able to contribute to high fidelity texture reproduction.
Asunto(s)
Percepción del Tacto , Tacto , Dedos , Fricción , Humanos , VibraciónRESUMEN
This article seeks to understand conditions under which virtual gratings produced via vibrotaction and friction modulation are perceived as similar and to find physical origins in the results. To accomplish this, we developed two single-axis devices, one based on electroadhesion and one based on out-of-plane vibration. The two devices had identical touch surfaces, and the vibrotactile device used a novel closed-loop controller to achieve precise control of out-of-plane plate displacement under varying load conditions across a wide ranget of frequencies. A first study measured the perceptual intensity equivalence curve of gratings generated under electroadhesion and vibrotaction across the 20-400 Hz frequency range. A second study assessed the perceptual similarity between two forms of skin excitation given the same driving frequency and same perceived intensity. Our results indicate that it is largely the out-of-plane velocity that predicts vibrotactile intensity relative to shear forces generated by friction modulation. A high degree of perceptual similarity between gratings generated through friction modulation and through vibrotaction is apparent and tends to scale with actuation frequency suggesting perceptual indifference to the manner of fingerpad actuation in the upper frequency range.