Design of a Biomimetic Tactile Sensor for Material Classification
Kevin Dai, Xinyu Wang, Allison M. Rojas, Evan Harber, Yu Tian,, Nicholas Paiva, Joseph Gnehm, Evan Schindewolf, Howie Choset, Victoria A., Webster-Wood, Lu Li

TL;DR
This paper presents a low-cost, biomimetic tactile sensor inspired by human skin that effectively classifies material textures with higher accuracy than non-ridge sensors, enabling advanced robotic tactile applications.
Contribution
The work introduces a novel biomimetic tactile sensor design with fingerprint structures, demonstrating improved material classification accuracy and low-cost fabrication for robotic sensing.
Findings
Sensor with fingerprint ridges outperforms ridge-less sensors by over 8% in accuracy.
High-resolution magnetic sensing enables detailed texture classification.
Biomimetic design reduces hardware costs and enhances sensing capabilities.
Abstract
Tactile sensing typically involves active exploration of unknown surfaces and objects, making it especially effective at processing the characteristics of materials and textures. A key property extracted by human tactile perception is surface roughness, which relies on measuring vibratory signals using the multi-layered fingertip structure. Existing robotic systems lack tactile sensors that are able to provide high dynamic sensing ranges, perceive material properties, and maintain a low hardware cost. In this work, we introduce the reference design and fabrication procedure of a miniature and low-cost tactile sensor consisting of a biomimetic cutaneous structure, including the artificial fingerprint, dermis, epidermis, and an embedded magnet-sensor structure which serves as a mechanoreceptor for converting mechanical information to digital signals. The presented sensor is capable of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Tactile and Sensory Interactions
