Title
Human's Capability to Discriminate Spatial Forces at the Big Toe.
Abstract
A key factor for reliable object manipulation is the tactile information provided by the skin of our hands. As this sensory information is so essential in our daily life it should also be provided during teleoperation of robotic devices or in the control of myoelectric prostheses. It is well-known that feeding back the tactile information to the user can lead to a more natural and intuitive control of robotic devices. However, in some applications it is difficult to use the hands as natural feedback channels since they may already be overloaded with other tasks or, e.g., in case of hand prostheses not accessible at all. Many alternatives for tactile feedback to the human hand have already been investigated. In particular, one approach shows that humans can integrate uni-directional (normal) force feedback at the toe into their sensorimotor-control loop. Extending this work, we investigate the human's capability to discriminate spatial forces at the bare front side of their toe. A state-of-the-art haptic feedback device was used to apply forces with three different amplitudes-2N, 5N, and 8N-to subjects' right big toes. During the experiments, different force stimuli were presented, i.e., direction of the applied force was changed, such that tangential components occured. In total the four directions up (distal), down (proximal), left (medial), and right (lateral) were tested. The proportion of the tangential force was varied corresponding to a directional change of 5 degrees to 25 degrees with respect to the normal force. Given these force stimuli, the subjects' task was to identify the direction of the force change. We found the amplitude of the force as well as the proportion of tangential forces to have a significant influence on the success rate. Furthermore, the direction right showed a significantly different successrate from all other directions. The stimuli with a force amplitude of 8 N achieved success rates over 89% in all directions. The results of the user study provide evidence that the subjects were able to discriminate spatial forces at their toe within defined force amplitudes and tangential proportion.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.3389/fnbot.2018.00013
FRONTIERS IN NEUROROBOTICS
Keywords
Field
DocType
tactile feedback,haptics,haptic display,teleoperation,prosthesis,human-in-the-loop,sensory substitution
Teleoperation,Computer vision,Computer science,Communication channel,Artificial intelligence,Sensory substitution,Normal force,Stimulus (physiology),Sensory system,Human-in-the-loop,Haptic technology,Machine learning
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
12
1662-5218
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
5
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Annette Hagengruber114.11
Hannes Hoppner2123.83
Jörn Vogel3116.48