Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds

Introduction: The explorative scanning movements of the hands have been compared to those of the eyes. The visual process is known to be composed of alternating phases of saccadic eye movements and fixation pauses. Descriptive results suggest that during the haptic exploration of objects short movem...

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Main Authors: Martin eGrunwald, Manivannan eMuniyandi, Hyun eKim, Jung eKim, Frank eKrause, Stephanie eMueller, Mandayam A. Srinivasan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00292/full
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spelling doaj-262abbaa974847b096d639da0be5ef762020-11-24T23:17:52ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-04-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0029268109Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of millisecondsMartin eGrunwald0Manivannan eMuniyandi1Hyun eKim2Jung eKim3Frank eKrause4Stephanie eMueller5Mandayam A. Srinivasan6University of Leipzig, Haptic-Research-LaboratoryIndian Institute of Technology, Biomedical EngineeringMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyKorea Advanced Institute of Science and TechnologyUniversity of Leipzig, Haptic-Research-LaboratoryUniversity of Leipzig, Haptic-Research-LaboratoryMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyIntroduction: The explorative scanning movements of the hands have been compared to those of the eyes. The visual process is known to be composed of alternating phases of saccadic eye movements and fixation pauses. Descriptive results suggest that during the haptic exploration of objects short movement pauses occur as well. The goal of the present study was to detect these explorative stops (ES) during one-handed and two-handed haptic explorations of various objects and patterns, and to measure their duration. Additionally, the associations between the following variables were analyzed: a) between mean exploration time and duration of ES, b) between certain stimulus features and ES frequency, and c) the duration of ES during the course of exploration. <br/>Methods: Five different experiments were used. The first two experiments were classical recognition tasks of unknown haptic stimuli (A) and of common objects (B). In experiment C space-position information of angle legs had to be perceived and reproduced. For experiments D and E the PHANToM haptic device was used for the exploration of virtual (D) and real (E) sunken reliefs. <br/>Results: In each experiment we observed explorative stops of different average durations. For experiment A: 329.50 ms, experiment B: 67.47 ms, experiment C: 189.92 ms, experiment D: 186.17 ms and experiment E: 140.02 ms. Significant correlations were observed between exploration time and the duration of the ES. Also, ES occurred more frequently, but not exclusively, at defined stimulus features like corners, curves and the endpoints of lines. However, explorative stops do not occur every time a stimulus feature is explored. <br/>Conclusions: We assume that ES are a general aspect of human haptic exploration processes. We have tried to interpret the occurrence and duration of ES with respect to the Hypotheses-Rebuild-Model and the Limited Capacity Control System theory.<br/>http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00292/fullHaptic explorationmovement stopsfinger explorationactive touch perceptionhaptic perception process
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin eGrunwald
Manivannan eMuniyandi
Hyun eKim
Jung eKim
Frank eKrause
Stephanie eMueller
Mandayam A. Srinivasan
spellingShingle Martin eGrunwald
Manivannan eMuniyandi
Hyun eKim
Jung eKim
Frank eKrause
Stephanie eMueller
Mandayam A. Srinivasan
Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
Frontiers in Psychology
Haptic exploration
movement stops
finger exploration
active touch perception
haptic perception process
author_facet Martin eGrunwald
Manivannan eMuniyandi
Hyun eKim
Jung eKim
Frank eKrause
Stephanie eMueller
Mandayam A. Srinivasan
author_sort Martin eGrunwald
title Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
title_short Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
title_full Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
title_fullStr Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
title_full_unstemmed Human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
title_sort human haptic perception is interrupted by explorative stops of milliseconds
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-04-01
description Introduction: The explorative scanning movements of the hands have been compared to those of the eyes. The visual process is known to be composed of alternating phases of saccadic eye movements and fixation pauses. Descriptive results suggest that during the haptic exploration of objects short movement pauses occur as well. The goal of the present study was to detect these explorative stops (ES) during one-handed and two-handed haptic explorations of various objects and patterns, and to measure their duration. Additionally, the associations between the following variables were analyzed: a) between mean exploration time and duration of ES, b) between certain stimulus features and ES frequency, and c) the duration of ES during the course of exploration. <br/>Methods: Five different experiments were used. The first two experiments were classical recognition tasks of unknown haptic stimuli (A) and of common objects (B). In experiment C space-position information of angle legs had to be perceived and reproduced. For experiments D and E the PHANToM haptic device was used for the exploration of virtual (D) and real (E) sunken reliefs. <br/>Results: In each experiment we observed explorative stops of different average durations. For experiment A: 329.50 ms, experiment B: 67.47 ms, experiment C: 189.92 ms, experiment D: 186.17 ms and experiment E: 140.02 ms. Significant correlations were observed between exploration time and the duration of the ES. Also, ES occurred more frequently, but not exclusively, at defined stimulus features like corners, curves and the endpoints of lines. However, explorative stops do not occur every time a stimulus feature is explored. <br/>Conclusions: We assume that ES are a general aspect of human haptic exploration processes. We have tried to interpret the occurrence and duration of ES with respect to the Hypotheses-Rebuild-Model and the Limited Capacity Control System theory.<br/>
topic Haptic exploration
movement stops
finger exploration
active touch perception
haptic perception process
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00292/full
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