A Directional Vibrotactile Feedback Interface for Ergonomic Postural Adjustment
Wansoo Kim, Virginia Ruiz Garate, Juan M. Gandarias, Marta Lorenzini,, Arash Ajoudani

TL;DR
This paper introduces a lightweight vibrotactile feedback device, ErgoTac, designed to guide ergonomic postural adjustments, demonstrating its effectiveness in improving posture during physically demanding tasks.
Contribution
Developed and evaluated a novel directional vibrotactile feedback interface for ergonomic guidance, identifying the most effective modality for intuitive postural correction.
Findings
The most effective feedback modality was identified through user experiments.
The device successfully guided users towards ergonomic postures during lifting tasks.
The approach can potentially reduce work-related musculoskeletal disorders.
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to develop and evaluate a directional vibrotactile feedback interface as a guidance tool for postural adjustments during work. In contrast to the existing active and wearable systems such as exoskeletons, we aim to create a lightweight and intuitive interface, capable of guiding its wearers towards more ergonomic and healthy working conditions. To achieve this, a vibrotactile device called ErgoTac is employed to develop three different feedback modalities that are able to provide a directional guidance at the body segments towards a desired pose. In addition, an evaluation is made to find the most suitable, comfortable, and intuitive feedback modality for the user. Therefore, these modalities are first compared experimentally on fifteen subjects wearing eight ErgoTac devices to achieve targeted arm and torso configurations. The most effective directional…
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