Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand

There are use cases where presenting spatial information via the tactile sense is useful (e.g., situations where visual and audio senses are not available). Conventional methods that directly attach a vibrotactile array to a user's body present spatial information such as direction by having us...

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Main Authors: Yusuke Ujitoko, Scinob Kuroki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.878397/full
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author Yusuke Ujitoko
Scinob Kuroki
author_facet Yusuke Ujitoko
Scinob Kuroki
author_sort Yusuke Ujitoko
collection DOAJ
description There are use cases where presenting spatial information via the tactile sense is useful (e.g., situations where visual and audio senses are not available). Conventional methods that directly attach a vibrotactile array to a user's body present spatial information such as direction by having users localize the vibration source from among the sources in the array. These methods suffer from problems such as heat generation of the actuator or the installation cost of the actuators in a limited space. A promising method of coping with these problems is to place the vibrotactile array at a distance from the body, instead of directly attaching it to the body, with the aim of presenting spatial information in the same way as the conventional method. The present study investigates the method's effectiveness by means of a psychophysical experiment. Specifically, we presented users with sinusoidal vibrations from remote vibrotactile arrays in the space around the hand and asked them to localize the source of the vibration. We conducted an experiment to investigate the localization ability by using two vibration frequencies (30 Hz as a low frequency and 230 Hz as a high frequency). We chose these two frequencies since they effectively activate two distinctive vibrotactile channels: the rapidly adapting afferent channel and the Pacinian channel. The experimental results showed that humans can recognize the direction of the vibration source, but not the distance, regardless of the source frequency. The accuracy of the direction recognition varied slightly according to the vibration source direction, and also according to the vibration frequency. This suggests that the calibration of stimulus direction is required in the case of both high and low frequencies for presenting direction accurately as intended. In addition, the accuracy variance of direction recognition increased as the source became farther away, and the degree of increase was especially large with the low-frequency source. This suggests that a high frequency is recommended for presenting accurate direction with low variance.
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spelling doaj.art-ec7f8e383cbc450d93c0f464e620cbe32022-12-22T00:29:22ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782022-06-011310.3389/fpsyg.2022.878397878397Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the HandYusuke UjitokoScinob KurokiThere are use cases where presenting spatial information via the tactile sense is useful (e.g., situations where visual and audio senses are not available). Conventional methods that directly attach a vibrotactile array to a user's body present spatial information such as direction by having users localize the vibration source from among the sources in the array. These methods suffer from problems such as heat generation of the actuator or the installation cost of the actuators in a limited space. A promising method of coping with these problems is to place the vibrotactile array at a distance from the body, instead of directly attaching it to the body, with the aim of presenting spatial information in the same way as the conventional method. The present study investigates the method's effectiveness by means of a psychophysical experiment. Specifically, we presented users with sinusoidal vibrations from remote vibrotactile arrays in the space around the hand and asked them to localize the source of the vibration. We conducted an experiment to investigate the localization ability by using two vibration frequencies (30 Hz as a low frequency and 230 Hz as a high frequency). We chose these two frequencies since they effectively activate two distinctive vibrotactile channels: the rapidly adapting afferent channel and the Pacinian channel. The experimental results showed that humans can recognize the direction of the vibration source, but not the distance, regardless of the source frequency. The accuracy of the direction recognition varied slightly according to the vibration source direction, and also according to the vibration frequency. This suggests that the calibration of stimulus direction is required in the case of both high and low frequencies for presenting direction accurately as intended. In addition, the accuracy variance of direction recognition increased as the source became farther away, and the degree of increase was especially large with the low-frequency source. This suggests that a high frequency is recommended for presenting accurate direction with low variance.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.878397/fullvibrotactilehapticslocalizationsinusoidal signaluser interfacedirection recognition
spellingShingle Yusuke Ujitoko
Scinob Kuroki
Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand
Frontiers in Psychology
vibrotactile
haptics
localization
sinusoidal signal
user interface
direction recognition
title Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand
title_full Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand
title_fullStr Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand
title_full_unstemmed Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand
title_short Sinusoidal Vibration Source Localization in Two-Dimensional Space Around the Hand
title_sort sinusoidal vibration source localization in two dimensional space around the hand
topic vibrotactile
haptics
localization
sinusoidal signal
user interface
direction recognition
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.878397/full
work_keys_str_mv AT yusukeujitoko sinusoidalvibrationsourcelocalizationintwodimensionalspacearoundthehand
AT scinobkuroki sinusoidalvibrationsourcelocalizationintwodimensionalspacearoundthehand