Abstract
While the relative motion between the skin and objects in contact with it is essential to everyday tactile experiences, our understanding of how tactile motion is perceived via human tactile function is limited. Previous studies have explored the effect of normal force on speed perception under conditions where multiple motion cues on the skin (spatiotemporal cue, tangential skin deformation cue, and slip-induced vibration cue) were integrated. However, the effect of the normal force on speed perception in terms of each motion cue remains unclear since the multiple motion cues have not been adequately separated in the previously reported experiments. In this study, we aim to elucidate the effect of normal force in situations where the speed perception of tactile motion is based solely on a spatiotemporal cue. We developed a pin-array display which allowed us to vary the intensity of the normal force without causing tangential forces or slip-induced vibrations. Using the display, we conducted two psychophysical experiments. In Experiment 1, we found that the speed of the object was perceived to be 1.12-1.14 times faster when the intensity of the normal force was doubled. In Experiment 2, we did not observe significant differences in the discriminability of tactile speed caused by differences in normal force intensity. Our experimental results are of scientific significance and offer insights for engineering applications when using haptic displays that can only provide spatiotemporal cues represented by normal forces.
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