Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Artificial SA-I, RA-I and RA-II/vibrotactile afferents for tactile sensing of texture
View through CrossRef
Robot touch can benefit from how humans perceive tactile textural information, from the stimulation mode to which tactile channels respond, then the tactile cues and encoding. Using a soft biomimetic tactile sensor (the TacTip) based on the physiology of the dermal–epidermal boundary, we construct two biomimetic tactile channels based on slowly adapting SA-I and rapidly adapting RA-I afferents, and introduce an additional sub-modality for vibrotactile information with an embedded microphone interpreted as an artificial RA-II channel. These artificial tactile channels are stimulated dynamically with a set of 13 artificial rigid textures comprising raised-bump patterns on a rotating drum that vary systematically in roughness. Methods employing spatial, spatio-temporal and temporal codes are assessed for texture classification insensitive to stimulation speed. We find: (i) spatially encoded frictional cues provide a salient representation of texture; (ii) a simple transformation of spatial tactile features to model natural afferent responses improves the temporal coding; and (iii) the harmonic structure of induced vibrations provides a pertinent code for speed-invariant texture classification. Just as human touch relies on an interplay between slowly adapting (SA-I), rapidly adapting (RA-I) and vibrotactile (RA-II) channels, this tripartite structure may be needed for future robot applications with human-like dexterity, from prosthetics to materials testing, handling and manipulation.
Title: Artificial SA-I, RA-I and RA-II/vibrotactile afferents for tactile sensing of texture
Description:
Robot touch can benefit from how humans perceive tactile textural information, from the stimulation mode to which tactile channels respond, then the tactile cues and encoding.
Using a soft biomimetic tactile sensor (the TacTip) based on the physiology of the dermal–epidermal boundary, we construct two biomimetic tactile channels based on slowly adapting SA-I and rapidly adapting RA-I afferents, and introduce an additional sub-modality for vibrotactile information with an embedded microphone interpreted as an artificial RA-II channel.
These artificial tactile channels are stimulated dynamically with a set of 13 artificial rigid textures comprising raised-bump patterns on a rotating drum that vary systematically in roughness.
Methods employing spatial, spatio-temporal and temporal codes are assessed for texture classification insensitive to stimulation speed.
We find: (i) spatially encoded frictional cues provide a salient representation of texture; (ii) a simple transformation of spatial tactile features to model natural afferent responses improves the temporal coding; and (iii) the harmonic structure of induced vibrations provides a pertinent code for speed-invariant texture classification.
Just as human touch relies on an interplay between slowly adapting (SA-I), rapidly adapting (RA-I) and vibrotactile (RA-II) channels, this tripartite structure may be needed for future robot applications with human-like dexterity, from prosthetics to materials testing, handling and manipulation.
Related Results
Tacsac: A Wearable Haptic Device with Capacitive Touch-Sensing Capability for Tactile Display
Tacsac: A Wearable Haptic Device with Capacitive Touch-Sensing Capability for Tactile Display
This paper presents a dual-function wearable device (Tacsac) with capacitive tactile sensing and integrated tactile feedback capability to enable communication among deafblind peop...
Shaping Material Experiences: Designing Vibrotactile Feedback for Active Perception
Shaping Material Experiences: Designing Vibrotactile Feedback for Active Perception
Imagine running your finger over a grid. The fingertip will start vibrating as it hits each individual element. This vibration is a function of both the spacing of the grid and the...
Ears on rears
Ears on rears
<p>Afferent neurons transmit information from both external and internal origin into the central nervous system (CNS). Sensory organs are connected at the periphery to these ...
Tactile direction discrimination in humans after stroke
Tactile direction discrimination in humans after stroke
Abstract
Sensing movements across the skin surface is a complex task for the tactile sensory system, relying on sophisticated cortical processing. Functional MRI has...
A Review on Tactile Displays for Conventional Laparoscopic Surgery
A Review on Tactile Displays for Conventional Laparoscopic Surgery
Laparoscopic surgery (LS) is a minimally invasive technique that offers many advantages over traditional open surgery: it reduces trauma, scarring, and shortens recovery time. Howe...
Adapting the Crossmodal Congruency Task for Measuring the Limits of Visual–Tactile Interactions Within and Between Groups
Adapting the Crossmodal Congruency Task for Measuring the Limits of Visual–Tactile Interactions Within and Between Groups
The crossmodal congruency task (CCT) is a commonly used paradigm for measuring visual–tactile interactions and how these may be influenced by discrepancies in space and time betwee...
A SURVEY ON HAPTIC CODEC DESIGN APPROACHES
A SURVEY ON HAPTIC CODEC DESIGN APPROACHES
Tactile communication as a part of Tactile Internet concept now is one of the most promising research areas in telecommunications. Methods and approaches to design tactile codec, a...
Traffic analysis for a parametric tactile codec
Traffic analysis for a parametric tactile codec
This article is devoted to the haptic communications types and methods. Haptic and tactile codecs were the research subject. As a research method authors engaged analysis of the cu...

