Leveraging Tendon Vibration to Enhance Pseudo-Haptic Perceptions in VR
Pseudo-haptic techniques are used to modify haptic perception by appropriately changing visual feedback to body movements. Based on the knowledge that tendon vibration can affect our somatosensory perception, this paper proposes a method for leveraging tendon vibration to enhance pseudo-haptics duri...
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Zusammenfassung: | Pseudo-haptic techniques are used to modify haptic perception by
appropriately changing visual feedback to body movements. Based on the
knowledge that tendon vibration can affect our somatosensory perception, this
paper proposes a method for leveraging tendon vibration to enhance
pseudo-haptics during free arm motion. Three experiments were performed to
examine the impact of tendon vibration on the range and resolution of
pseudo-haptics. The first experiment investigated the effect of tendon
vibration on the detection threshold of the discrepancy between visual and
physical motion. The results indicated that vibrations applied to the inner
tendons of the wrist and elbow increased the threshold, suggesting that tendon
vibration can augment the applicable visual motion gain by approximately 13\%
without users detecting the visual/physical discrepancy. Furthermore, the
results demonstrate that tendon vibration acts as noise on haptic motion cues.
The second experiment assessed the impact of tendon vibration on the resolution
of pseudo-haptics by determining the just noticeable difference in
pseudo-weight perception. The results suggested that the tendon vibration does
not largely compromise the resolution of pseudo-haptics. The third experiment
evaluated the equivalence between the weight perception triggered by tendon
vibration and that by visual motion gain, that is, the point of subjective
equality. The results revealed that vibration amplifies the weight perception
and its effect was equivalent to that obtained using a gain of 0.64 without
vibration, implying that the tendon vibration also functions as an additional
haptic cue. Our results provide design guidelines and future work for enhancing
pseudo-haptics with tendon vibration. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2209.00435 |