论文标题
利用肌腱振动以增强VR中的伪热感知
Leveraging Tendon Vibration to Enhance Pseudo-Haptic Perceptions in VR
论文作者
论文摘要
伪热技术用于通过适当地改变对身体运动的视觉反馈来改变触觉感知。基于知道肌腱振动会影响我们的体感感知的知识,本文提出了一种利用肌腱振动以增强伪haptics在自由臂运动过程中的方法。进行了三个实验,以检查肌腱振动对伪热疗法的范围和分辨率的影响。第一个实验研究了肌腱振动对视觉和身体运动之间差异的检测阈值的影响。结果表明,应用于腕部和肘部内部腱的振动增加了阈值,这表明肌腱振动可以将适用的视觉运动增益增加约13 \%,而不会检测到视觉/物理差异。此外,结果表明肌腱振动在触觉运动提示上充当噪声。第二个实验通过确定伪重量感知的明显差异,评估了肌腱振动对伪热的分辨率的影响。结果表明,肌腱振动在很大程度上不会损害伪热的分辨率。第三个实验评估了肌腱振动触发的重量感知与视觉运动增益(即主观平等点)之间的等效性。结果表明,振动会放大重量感知及其作用等效于使用0.64的增益而没有振动而获得的振动,这意味着肌腱振动也起着额外的触觉提示。我们的结果提供了设计指南和未来的工作,以增强肌腱振动的伪热量。
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.