个体差异对柔顺弹性表面皮肤变形和触觉辨别的影响。

Bingxu Li, Gregory J Gerling
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引用次数: 6

摘要

触觉敏锐度的个体差异在年龄组内和年龄组之间被观察到。这种敏锐度的差异可能有多种原因,包括神经系统、皮肤力学、手指大小、认知和行为因素等方面。这项工作考虑了个体差异,在年轻的参与者群体中,在区分柔顺表面。这些参与者表现出不同的手指大小和僵硬程度。有趣的是,他们的手指大小和僵硬度都能很好地预测他们的区分表现,柔软/较小的手指比僵硬/较大的手指表现得更好。立体成像捕捉了皮肤变形的生物力学线索,包括接触面积和穿透深度,以及它们的变化率。在那些手指较硬/较大的个体中,他们在感知上表现较差,我们观察到与柔软/较小的手指相比,不易区分的接触区域和偏心率。这些特殊的线索很好地预测了知觉歧视中观察到的个体差异。相比之下,对于曲率和穿透深度这两种线索,无论手指的刚度/尺寸如何,成像都能很容易地区分出柔顺表面,而不是与识别一致。总之,在被动触摸中,我们发现手指柔软/较小的个体在区分顺从方面表现得更好,并且某些皮肤变形线索可以预测个体感知的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Individual differences impacting skin deformation and tactile discrimination with compliant elastic surfaces.

Individual differences impacting skin deformation and tactile discrimination with compliant elastic surfaces.

Individual differences in tactile acuity are observed within and between age cohorts. Such differences in acuity may be attributed to various sources, including aspects of nervous system, skin mechanics, finger size, cognitive and behavioral factors, etc. This work considers individual differences, within a younger cohort of participants, in discriminating compliant surfaces. These participants exhibit a range of finger size and stiffness. Interestingly, both their finger size and stiffness well predict their discriminative performance, where softer/smaller fingers outperform stiffer/larger fingers. Stereo imaging captured biomechanical cues in the skin's deformation, including contact area and penetration depth, and their change rates. In those individuals with stiffer/larger fingers, who perceptually performed worse, we observed less distinguishable contact areas and eccentricities, compared to softer/smaller fingers. These particular cues well predicted individual differences observed in perceptual discrimination. In comparison, with two other cues, curvature and penetration depth, the imaging readily distinguished the compliant surfaces irrespective of finger stiffness/size, not aligned with discrimination. In conclusion, in passive touch, we find that individuals with softer/smaller fingers were better at discriminating compliances, and that certain skin deformation cues predict individual differences in perception.

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