Tactile perception

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Tactile perception Mariacarla Memeo Robotics, Brain and Cognitive Science(RBCS) Multisensory mapping group Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT), Italy

Transcript of Tactile perception

Page 1: Tactile perception

Tactile perception

Mariacarla MemeoRobotics, Brain and Cognitive Science(RBCS)

Multisensory mapping groupIstituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT), Italy

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● Perceptual process● Human sense of touch

1. Somatosensory system

2. Mechanoreceptors

3. Tactile acuity

4. Receptive field

● Electric metaphor of mechanoreceptors

Outline

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Perceptual process

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Skin

Skin - heaviest organ in the body

Functions:

Provides tactile information.

Warns us of damaging stimuli.

Contains body fluids and organs.

Protects against bacteria.

Regulates body temperature.

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Why touch is important?

Haptic senses—or “touch”—is the most basic of senses; we learn this before vision and smell.

Everyday Tasks:

● Grasping objects;

● Dialing a phone;

● Playing a guitar or piano;

● Finding a light switch;

● Feeling your pulse.

Touch is complex (e.g. tying a shoelace): bi-directional communication channel – both input & output

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Human sense of Touch

Touch helps us identify objects and provides unique information (e.g., texture, friction)

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Skin structure and mechanoreceptorsu

Somatosensory system

Human Sense of Touch

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Somatosensory system

The 'somatosensory system' is a sensory that detects experiences labelled as touch or pressure, temperature(warm or cold), pain(including itch and tickle) and those that belong to proprioception(muscle movement and joint position).

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Somatosensory Cortex

Damage to somatosensory cortex destroys ability to recognize objects by touch.

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The body is mapped topographically onto somatosensory cortex, but body parts are not represented equally.

Somatosensory Cortex

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ANTEROLATERAL SYSTEM

This system is involved in the perception of touch, temperature, and sharp pain. Next instead is selectively involved in the perception of deep, chronic pain.

Somatosensory Pathway

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Mechanoreceptors

These are thetissue “filter”between stimulusand nerve ending .

Each type encodesa different aspectof deformation.

(Stimulus)Mechanical

filter

Transducer(mechanical energy →bioelectric signals)

Encoder

Ruffini cylinder

Pacini corpuscole

Meissner corpuscole

Merkel receptors

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Two types located close to surface of the skin

Merkel receptor fires continuously while stimulus

is present.

Responsible for sensing fine details

Meissner corpuscle fires only when a stimulus is

first applied and when it is removed.

Responsible for controlling hand-grip

Mechanoreceptors

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Mechanoreceptors

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Two types located deeper in the skin

Ruffini cylinder fires continuously to stimulation

Associated with perceiving stretching of the skin

Pacinian corpuscle fires only when a stimulus is first applied and when it is removed.

Associated with sensing rapid vibrations and fine texture

Mechanoreceptors

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Mechanoreceptors

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Mechanoreceptors – temporal features

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Mechanoreceptors – spatial features

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Tactile acuity thresholds are determined by Merkel receptors (SA1).

● Measuring tactile acuity

● Two-point threshold - minimum separation needed between two points to perceive them as two units

Tactile acuity

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● Measuring tactile acuity

● Grating acuity - placing a grooved stimulus on the skin and asking the participant to indicate the orientation of the grating

Tactile acuity

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Tactile acuity

Merkel receptors are densely packed on the fingertips - similar to cones in the fovea.

Both two-point thresholds and grating acuity studies show these results

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The receptive field of an individual sensory neuron is the particular part of the body surface in which a stimulus will trigger the firing of that neuron.

The two-point threshold for any part of the body is determined by the size of the receptive fields and the extent of overlap.

Receptive Field

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Tactile acuity is determined by how close the mechanoreceptors are to each other and by the size of the receptive field

Receptive Field

Inhibitory region

Excitatory

region

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Receptive FieldMechanoreceptors found in areas of the body with less tactile acuity tend to have larger receptive fields.

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Electrical metaphor

Ruffini cylinder

Pacini corpuscole

Meissner corpuscole

Merkel receptors

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● Perceptual process (continue)● Meaning

1. Psychophysics

2. Absolute threshold

3. Differential threshold (Just Noticeable Difference)

● Tactile feedback

● Tactile technologies

● Simulate tactile perception (our robot)

Outline

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Perceptual process

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Science that focuses on how the physical environment is integrated into our personal, subjective world.

● Ernst Weber & Gustav Fechner -- psychophysicists

Psychophysics

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● Weber published “De tactu” describing the minimum amount of tactile stimulation needed to experience a sensation of touch – the absolute threshold.● Using weights he found that holding versus lifting them gave different results

(due to muscles involved).

● He used a tactile compass to study how two-point discrimination varied across the body.● On the fingertip .22 cm, on the lips .30 cm,

on the back 4.06 cm.

Absolute threshold

Aesthesiometric compass

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● Weber studied how much a stimulus must change in order for a person to sense the change.● How much heavier must a weight be in order for a person to notice that it is

heavier?

● This amount is called the just noticeable difference JND

Just Noticeable Difference (JND)

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1)A stimulus is presented at astarting quantity Q.

1)Once the subject is adapted tothis stimulus, the attribute isincreased …

…each time the subject is asked…

yes or no

if there is a difference in thestimulus.

Just Noticeable Difference (JND)

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After repeated trials theincrement T that produces a

perceptible difference

is identified:

75% of right difference inthreshold identified.

Just Noticeable Difference (JND)

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After repeated trials theincrement T that produces a

perceptible difference

is identified.

It is calculated when the

75% of right difference inthreshold identified.

Just Noticeable Difference (JND)

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When the starting quantity is thestimulus zero value (completeabsence of the stimulus), thenthe first jnd value T is called

… absolute threshold Q0…

This is the minimum stimulusquantity necessary to produceany sensation.

Just Noticeable Difference (JND)

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● JND can be expressed as a ratio:

where (Q + Q0) is stimulus magnitude and k is a constant and DQ means the change in R (D usually means change).

or

● Weber's law asserts that the ratio k is constant across a wide range of stimulus quantities, although the value of k is different for different sensory domains or types of stimulus.

kQQ

T

)( 0

Just Noticeable Difference (JND)

kQQ

Q

D

)( 0

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● Fechner related the physical and psychological worlds using mathematics.

● Fechner (1860) said:“Psychophysics, already related to physics by name must on one hand be based on psychology, and [on] the other hand promises to give psychology a mathematical foundation.” (pp. 9-10)

● Fechner called Weber’s finding about the JND “Weber’s Law.”

Fechner Contribution

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● Fechner's Law allows the estimation of the sensory intensity (S) from the stimulus quantity:

where S is sensation, k is Weber’s constant and R is the magnitude of a stimulus

● The larger the stimulus magnitude, the greater the amount of difference needed to produce a JND.

)log( 0QQkS

Fechner Contribution

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Relationship of JND with Stimulus

)log( 0QQkS

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● His methods are still used in psychophysics.

● Ideas from signal detection theory have been applied to a wide variety of other topics.● Threshold for criminal behavior, scenic beauty.

● Scaling techniques, including rating scales, were placed on a sound scientific basis, especially by S.S. Stevens modified Fechner’s Log

Law to a Power Function in the early 1950’s.

Fechner Contribution

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Goal is to stimulate the skin in a programmable manner to create a desired set of sensations.

Tactile feedback is generated by a tactile device, sometimes called a tactile displays or tactile interfaces.

Tactile feedback aims to create a metaphor to communicate specific information.

Tactile Feedback

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Pins or other mechanical vibrating elements, such as servo motors - either alone or in an array, as in devices for Braille display

● typically used for fingertip stimulation

Tactile Technologies

Wagner & Howe 2002

Kyung et al. 2006

Brayda et al. 2010

Cannella 2009

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Tactile device, able to deliver simple tactile maps of virtual objects by means of heights information.

TActile MOuse (TAMO)

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Cushions of air can be inflated or deflated to vary pressure on skin

Tactile Technologies

Okamura et al. 2014Chih-Hung King 2008

Siarhei Vishniakou et al. 2013

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● Skin stretch to simulate moving stimuli.

● Electro-tactile devices.

Hayward et al. 2003-7Provancher et al. 2013

Kajimoto laboratory 2014

Tactile Technologies