Quantifying Tactile Perception of Fabrics Using Both Frictional and Acoustic Methods
Laure Kyriazis, Tugce Caykara, Daniel Ingo Hefft, Alberto Martinez, Zhenyu Jason Zhang

TL;DR
This paper explores how friction and sound can be used to measure how fabrics feel to the touch, showing that sound measurements can better distinguish fabric textures.
Contribution
A novel method combining acoustic emission and frictional data to quantify tactile perception of fabrics.
Findings
Friction alone could distinguish solid substrates but not fabrics.
Acoustic emission successfully differentiated fabric materials.
Acoustic emission provides complementary and standalone tactile perception data.
Abstract
Skin friction underpins tactile perception of formulated products, such as cosmetics, fabric softeners, and surface coatings, that are designed to deliver satisfactory tactile sensory properties. Establishing the correlation between the tribological properties of skin contacts and tactile perception is therefore critical. We have developed a novel approach to acquire the acoustic emission (AE) signal generated by human finger sliding against fabric and non-fabric substrates, whilst capturing its frictional characteristics with a force plate. Principal Component Analysis was deployed to construct clusters formed for each material based on the sensory evaluation, and to establish the correlation between frictional and acoustic emission data. Our results show that the planar solid substrates could be discriminated solely based on the friction results, whilst the fabric materials were not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials · Tactile and Sensory Interactions · Textile materials and evaluations
