Tactile change detection

Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, relatively little research has been conducted to explore any cognitive and/or attentional limitations that may be inherent when using the body as a receptor surface for the transmission of information. In...

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Main Authors: Gallace, A, Tan, H, Spence, C
Format: Conference item
Published: 2005
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author Gallace, A
Tan, H
Spence, C
author_facet Gallace, A
Tan, H
Spence, C
author_sort Gallace, A
collection OXFORD
description Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, relatively little research has been conducted to explore any cognitive and/or attentional limitations that may be inherent when using the body as a receptor surface for the transmission of information. In the present study, participants attempted to detect changes to tactile patterns presented sequentially on the body surface. The patterns consisted of 1-3 vibrotactile stimuli presented for 200ms with a blank interstimulus interval of 800ms. The pattern of tactile stimulation was repeatedly changed (alternating between two different patterns) on 50% of the trials, while no change occurred on the remaining trials. The results showed that participants often failed to detect the changes to the consecutively-presented tactile patterns. This finding may reflect a tactile equivalent of the phenomenon of change blindness reported in previous visual studies. The implications of these finding for human tactile interface design are discussed.
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spelling oxford-uuid:91620009-5206-4516-ae9c-c89f352de18e2022-03-26T23:18:22ZTactile change detectionConference itemhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794uuid:91620009-5206-4516-ae9c-c89f352de18eSymplectic Elements at Oxford2005Gallace, ATan, HSpence, CInterest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, relatively little research has been conducted to explore any cognitive and/or attentional limitations that may be inherent when using the body as a receptor surface for the transmission of information. In the present study, participants attempted to detect changes to tactile patterns presented sequentially on the body surface. The patterns consisted of 1-3 vibrotactile stimuli presented for 200ms with a blank interstimulus interval of 800ms. The pattern of tactile stimulation was repeatedly changed (alternating between two different patterns) on 50% of the trials, while no change occurred on the remaining trials. The results showed that participants often failed to detect the changes to the consecutively-presented tactile patterns. This finding may reflect a tactile equivalent of the phenomenon of change blindness reported in previous visual studies. The implications of these finding for human tactile interface design are discussed.
spellingShingle Gallace, A
Tan, H
Spence, C
Tactile change detection
title Tactile change detection
title_full Tactile change detection
title_fullStr Tactile change detection
title_full_unstemmed Tactile change detection
title_short Tactile change detection
title_sort tactile change detection
work_keys_str_mv AT gallacea tactilechangedetection
AT tanh tactilechangedetection
AT spencec tactilechangedetection