Human Tactile Stochastic Resonance Affected by Stimulus Direction

Tactile sensors and their data processing are very important in enabling robots to handle objects. With information processing by biological organisms, stochastic resonance (SR) can enhance sensitivity by superimposing proper noise upon undetectable weak signals to detect the target signal. To inves...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kadir Beceren, Masahiro Ohka, Tao Jin, Tetsu Miyaoka, Hanafiah Yussof
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-03-01
Series:International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5772/55934
Description
Summary:Tactile sensors and their data processing are very important in enabling robots to handle objects. With information processing by biological organisms, stochastic resonance (SR) can enhance sensitivity by superimposing proper noise upon undetectable weak signals to detect the target signal. To investigate the SR of human tactile sensation and elucidate the mechanism of tactile SR for the development of a new tactile sensor, we performed a series of psychophysical experiments using tangential vibration with 2.5-mm and 8-mm-sized stimulus points. We examined the difference threshold (difference limen; DL) variation obtained from these experiments to clarify which conditions of vibration direction and stimulus size cause the strongest SR. The experimental results show that neither normal nor tangential DL is significantly affected by stimulus point size. Moreover, tactile sensing precision is enhanced by appropriate noise. The characteristics of SR, with normal vibration obtained from our prior study is quite different from that with tangential vibration.
ISSN:1729-8814