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Cited 4 time in webofscience Cited 5 time in scopus
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Effects of Contact Force and Vibration Frequency on Vibrotactile Sensitivity During Active Touch SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Effects of Contact Force and Vibration Frequency on Vibrotactile Sensitivity During Active Touch
Authors
Oh, S.Choi, S.
Date Issued
2019-07
Publisher
IEEE COMPUTER SOC
Abstract
Humans require precise force control to execute fine manual tasks, which is generally facilitated to a great extent by providing adequate feedback. Currently, such dexterous manual tasks can be an input source of computing. To design appropriate vibrotactile stimuli for manual tasks, it is essential to quantify human vibrotactile sensitivity over a large range of contact forces. In this paper, we report the psychophysical detection thresholds for vibrotactile stimuli measured for five pressing forces that cover the range of forces encountered during ordinary manual tasks. The experimental results showed stark contrasts between stimulus frequencies, depending on actively exerted pressing force. The detection thresholds for 40 & x00A0;Hz stimuli first increased and then decreased as the pressing force increased, but the detection threshold for 250 & x00A0;Hz stimuli generally decreased as the force increased. These results have immediate consequences on the design of vibrotactile feedback for manual tasks in many applications of tangible interaction, tele-operation, and VR.
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/100058
DOI
10.1109/TOH.2019.2929521
ISSN
1939-1412
Article Type
Article
Citation
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON HAPTICS, vol. 12, no. 4, page. 645 - 651, 2019-07
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