Litcius/Paper detail

First Steps Towards Designing Electrotactons: Investigating Intensity and Pulse Frequency as Parameters for Electrotactile Cues

Yosuef Alotaibi, John Williamson, Stephen Brewster

2022CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electrotactile stimulation is a novel form of haptic feedback. There is little work investigating its basic design parameters and how they create effective tactile cues. This paper describes two experiments that extend our knowledge of two key parameters. The first investigated the combination of pulse width and amplitude (Intensity) on sensations of urgency, annoyance, valence and arousal. Results showed significant effects: increasing Intensity caused higher ratings of urgency, annoyance and arousal but reduced valence. We established clear levels for differentiating each sensation. A second study then investigated Intensity and Pulse Frequency to find out how many distinguishable levels could be perceived. Results showed that both Intensity and Pulse Frequency significantly affected perception, with four distinguishable levels of Intensity and two of Pulse Frequency. These results add significant new knowledge about the parameter space of electrotactile cue design and help designers select suitable properties to use when creating electrotactile cues.

Topics & Concepts

AnnoyanceValence (chemistry)ArousalPerceptionIntensity (physics)SensationPulse (music)Computer scienceAcousticsPsychophysicsAudiologyArtificial intelligenceComputer visionPsychologyCognitive psychologyPhysicsOpticsNeuroscienceDetectorMedicineTelecommunicationsQuantum mechanicsLoudnessTactile and Sensory InteractionsMultisensory perception and integrationVisual perception and processing mechanisms