Spatiotemporal influences on the recognition of two-dimensional vibrotactile patterns on the abdomen

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied

This study reveals that patterns made up of several vibration points are better recognized when pattern elements are clearly isolated in time and space. The feeling of a single point moving continuously along the skin, as if the pattern was manually drawn on the skin, does not appear to favor the recognition of patterns’ shape
Accessibility
Sensory Substitution
Haptic Interface
Psychophysics
Authors

Elise Faugloire

Laure Lejeune

Marc-Aurèle Rivière

Bruno Mantel

Published

September 2, 2022

Doi
Abstract

Spatial and temporal factors are known to highly influence tactile perception, but their role has been largely unexplored in the case of two-dimensional (2D) pattern recognition. We investigated whether recognition is facilitated by the spatial and/or temporal separation of pattern elements, or by conditions known to favor perceptual integration, such as the ones eliciting apparent movement. 2D vibrotactile patterns were presented to the abdomen of novice participants. In Experiment 1, we manipulated the spatial (inter-tactor distance) and temporal (burst duration and inter-burst interval) parameters applied to the tracing mode (sequential activation of pattern elements). In Experiment 2, we compared display modes differing in their level of temporal overlap in the presentation of pattern elements: the static mode (simultaneous activation of pattern elements), the slit-scan mode (pattern revealed line by line), and the tracing mode. The results of both experiments reveal that (a) recognition performance increases with the isolation of pattern elements in space and/or in time, (b) spatial and temporal factors interact in pattern recognition, and (c) conditions leading to apparent movement tend to be associated with lower recognition accuracy. These results further our understanding of tactile perception and provide guidance for the design of future vibrotactile communication systems.


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Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{faugloire2022,
  author = {Elise Faugloire and Laure Lejeune and Marc-Aurèle Rivière
    and Bruno Mantel},
  title = {Spatiotemporal Influences on the Recognition of
    Two-Dimensional Vibrotactile Patterns on the Abdomen},
  journal = {Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied},
  volume = {28},
  number = {3},
  pages = {606-628},
  date = {22-09-02},
  url = {https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2022-01207-001},
  doi = {10.1037/xap0000404},
  issn = {1939-2192, 1076-898X},
  langid = {en},
  abstract = {Spatial and temporal factors are known to highly influence
    tactile perception, but their role has been largely unexplored in
    the case of two-dimensional (2D) pattern recognition. We
    investigated whether recognition is facilitated by the spatial
    and/or temporal separation of pattern elements, or by conditions
    known to favor perceptual integration, such as the ones eliciting
    apparent movement. 2D vibrotactile patterns were presented to the
    abdomen of novice participants. In Experiment 1, we manipulated the
    spatial (inter-tactor distance) and temporal (burst duration and
    inter-burst interval) parameters applied to the tracing mode
    (sequential activation of pattern elements). In Experiment 2, we
    compared display modes differing in their level of temporal overlap
    in the presentation of pattern elements: the static mode
    (simultaneous activation of pattern elements), the slit-scan mode
    (pattern revealed line by line), and the tracing mode. The results
    of both experiments reveal that (a) recognition performance
    increases with the isolation of pattern elements in space and/or in
    time, (b) spatial and temporal factors interact in pattern
    recognition, and (c) conditions leading to apparent movement tend to
    be associated with lower recognition accuracy. These results further
    our understanding of tactile perception and provide guidance for the
    design of future vibrotactile communication systems.}
}
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Elise Faugloire, Laure Lejeune, Marc-Aurèle Rivière, & Bruno Mantel. (22 C.E.). Spatiotemporal influences on the recognition of two-dimensional vibrotactile patterns on the abdomen. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 28(3), 606–628. https://doi.org/10.1037/xap0000404