Abstract

Teleoperation during a catastrophic event requires an interface that can perform under frequently changing circumstances caused by unpredictable and dangerous conditions. Thus, teleoperation interfaces are under active development to provide both visual and haptic feedback to the fingers. However, studies of teleoperation systems with finger haptic feedback based on force profiles are difficult to conduct because of interface limitations. Therefore, in this paper, we introduce an intuitive teleoperation interface, an anthropomorphic teleoperated robot, and a hand-wearable force-feedback system that provides various feedbacks to the fingers. We combined these systems to compare and evaluated the performance of tactile and kinesthetic finger feedback using two experiments: maintaining appropriate grip force for variably fragile objects and following a force trajectory that changed in real time. Ten subjects participated in the experiments. The results were analyzed using repeated measures analysis of variance. Feedback factors differed significantly. Provision of force feedback to the user’s finger was most effective in both teleoperation experiments.

Full Text
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