Sensory substitution using tactile pin arrays: Human factors, technology and applications (original) (raw)

Wall, Steven A. and Brewster, Stephen ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9720-3899(2006) Sensory substitution using tactile pin arrays: Human factors, technology and applications.Signal Processing, 86(12), pp. 3674-3695. (doi: 10.1016/j.sigpro.2006.02.048)

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Publisher's URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sigpro.2006.02.048

Abstract

Tactile arrays use a matrix of individually controllable elements to present spatial and temporal patterns of cutaneous information. Early devices of this type were in the field of sensory substitution to replace vision or hearing for users with a sensory impairment. Many advances have been made due to the appropriation of tactile displays for telerobotics and virtual reality, to represent physical contact with a remote or simulated environment. However, many of these have been limited to engineering prototypes. The recent commercial availability of affordable, portable tactile pin arrays has provided renewed impetus to apply the technology to sensory substitution applications. Lack of access to digitally stored data can prove a significant barrier to blind people seeking careers in numerate disciplines. Tactile displays could potentially provide a discrete and portable means of accessing graphical information in an intuitive non-visual manner. Results are presented from experiments on tactual perception related to understanding graphs and simple visualisations with a commercially available tactile array device. It was found that subjects could discriminate positive or negative line gradient to within ±4.7° of the horizontal, compared to ±3.25° for results with a force feedback mouse and ±2.42° with a raised paper representation.

Item Type: Articles
Status: Published
Refereed: Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID: Brewster, Professor Stephen
Authors: Wall, S. A., and Brewster, S.
College/School: College of Science and Engineering > School of Computing Science
Journal Name: Signal Processing
Publisher: Elsevier
ISSN: 0165-1684
Published Online: 08 June 2006

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Funder and Project Information

1

An investigation of multimodal interaction with tactile displays

Stephen Brewster

GR/S53244/01

Computing Science

1

An investigation of the use of tactile displays for visualisation for blind people

Stephen Brewster

Gr/S53251/01

Computing Science

Deposit and Record Details

ID Code: 13850
Depositing User: Mr Adam Field
Datestamp: 19 Dec 2009 15:47
Last Modified: 04 Apr 2025 08:14
Date of first online publication: 8 June 2006