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0.1098-rsif.2021.0822 |
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220421s2022 CNT 000 0 und d |
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|a 17425662 (ISSN)
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|a Artificial SA-I and RA-I afferents for tactile sensing of ridges and gratings
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|b NLM (Medline)
|c 2022
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|z View Fulltext in Publisher
|u https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2021.0822
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|a For robot touch to reach the capabilities of human touch, artificial tactile sensors may require transduction principles like those of natural tactile afferents. Here we propose that a biomimetic tactile sensor (the TacTip) could provide suitable artificial analogues of the tactile skin dynamics, afferent responses and population encoding. Our three-dimensionally printed sensor skin is based on the physiology of the dermal-epidermal interface with an underlying mesh of biomimetic intermediate ridges and dermal papillae, comprising inner pins tipped with markers. Slowly adapting SA-I activity is modelled by marker displacements and rapidly adapting RA-I activity by marker speeds. We test the biological plausibility of these artificial population codes with three classic experiments used for natural touch: (1a) responses to normal pressure to test adaptation of single afferents and spatial modulation across the population; (1b) responses to bars, edges and gratings to compare with measurements from monkey primary afferents; and (2) discrimination of grating orientation to compare with human perceptual performance. Our results show a match between artificial and natural touch at single afferent, population and perceptual levels. As expected, natural skin is more sensitive, which raises a challenge to fabricate a biomimetic fingertip that demonstrates human sensitivity using the transduction principles of human touch.
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|a biomimetics
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|a neurophysiology
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|a psychophysics
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|a robotics
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|a sensors
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|a touch
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|a Griffith, T.
|e author
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|a Lepora, N.F.
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|a Pestell, N.
|e author
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|t Journal of the Royal Society, Interface
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