Authors
Marianna Obrist, Sue Ann Seah, Sriram Subramanian
Publication date
2013/4/27
Book
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems
Pages
1659-1668
Description
A common problem with designing and developing applications with tactile interfaces is the lack of a vocabulary that allows one to describe or communicate about haptics. Here we present the findings from a study exploring participants' verbalizations of their tactile experiences across two modulated tactile stimuli (16Hz and 250Hz) related to two important mechanoreceptors in the human hand. The study, with 14 participants, applied the explicitation interview technique to capture detailed descriptions of the diachronic and synchronic structure of tactile experiences. We propose 14 categories for a human-experiential vocabulary based on the categorization of the findings and tie them back to neurophysiological and psychophysical data on the human hand. We finally discuss design opportunities created through this experiential understanding in relation to the two mechanoreceptors.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Obrist, SA Seah, S Subramanian - Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human …, 2013