Tactile Roughness Perception of Virtual Gratings by Electrovibration
Aykut Isleyen, Yasemin Vardar, Cagatay Basdogan

TL;DR
This study compares how people perceive roughness on real and virtual gratings using electrovibration, revealing differences influenced by finger penetration and normal force, with implications for haptic texture rendering.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed psychophysical comparison of real and virtual tactile roughness perception, highlighting the role of finger penetration and force dynamics.
Findings
Perception of roughness differs between real and virtual gratings.
Finger penetration influences tangential forces and perceived roughness.
Rate of change of tangential force correlates with perceived roughness.
Abstract
Realistic display of tactile textures on touch screens is a big step forward for haptic technology to reach a wide range of consumers utilizing electronic devices on a daily basis. Since the texture topography cannot be rendered explicitly by electrovibration on touch screens, it is important to understand how we perceive the virtual textures displayed by friction modulation via electrovibration. We investigated the roughness perception of real gratings made of plexiglass and virtual gratings displayed by electrovibration through a touch screen for comparison. In particular, we conducted two psychophysical experiments with 10 participants to investigate the effect of spatial period and the normal force applied by finger on roughness perception of real and virtual gratings in macro size. We also recorded the contact forces acting on the participants' finger during the experiments. The…
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