Showing posts with label tactile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tactile. Show all posts

2009-08-08

Touchable Holography

clipped from www.physorg.com

Touchable Hologram Becomes Reality (w/ Video)

Touchable hologram
(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers from the University of Tokyo have developed 3D holograms that can be touched with bare hands. Generally, holograms can't be felt because they're made only of light. But the new technology adds tactile feedback to holograms hovering in 3D space.
clipped from www.siggraph.org

Touchable Holography

This project adds tactile feedback to the hovering image in 3D free space. Tactile sensation requires contact with objects, but including a stimulator in the work space dilutes the appearance of holographic images. The Airborne Ultrasound Tactile Display solves this problem by producing tactile sensation on a user's hand without any direct contact and without diluting the quality of the holographic projection.

What is "Touchable Holography" ?

  • One Page Abstract (PDF)

  • blog it

    Sources:
    Touchable Hologram Becomes Reality (w/ Video)
    Emerging Technologies | Galleries & Experiences | SIGGRAPH 2009
    Touchable Holography
    Related:
    Touchable Holograms Bring the Holodeck One Step Closer - Holodecks - io9
    Touchable Holography made possible with Wii Remotes and ultrasound – Video Games Reviews, Cheats | Geek.com
    Feeling Virtual Environments With Ultrasound - HotHardware

    2009-04-10

    How Touch Affects Vision

    Clipped from: How You Feel The World Impacts How You See It


    How You Feel The World Impacts How You See It

    ScienceDaily (Apr. 10, 2009) — In the classic waterfall illusion, if you stare at the downward motion of a waterfall for some period of time, stationary objects — such as rocks — appear to drift upward. MIT neuroscientists have found that this phenomenon, called motion aftereffect, occurs not only in our visual perception but also in our tactile perception, and that these senses actually influence one another. Put another way, how you feel the world can actually change how you see it — and vice versa.


    This stimulator was used in a study to show that how humans feel the world can actually change how they see it -- and vice versa.


    Clipped from: MIT-led team creates touch-based illusion - MIT News Office

    MIT news

    MIT-led team creates touch-based illusion

    Mind trick yields new insights on perception

    In the visual illusion known as the apparent motion quartet, two dots are presented at diagonally opposite corners of an imaginary square. When the pattern alternates between the two diagonals--top left/bottom right followed by top right/bottom left--people perceive the dots as moving back and forth either horizontally or vertically. After a period of time, typically a minute or two, most observers report that the axis of motion appears to flip from vertical to horizontal or vice versa.

    An example of the illusion can be seen at web.mit.edu/~tkonkle/www/AmbiguousQuartet.html.

    To create a tactile version of this illusion, Olivia Carter, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard University, and Talia Konkle, a graduate student in Moore's MIT lab, used a new piezoelectric stimulator device developed by Qi Wang and Vincent Hayward at McGill University. This device, originally designed as a computer Braille display, uses a centimeter-square array composed of 60 "tactors" to deliver precisely controlled touch stimuli to the finger tips of volunteer subjects.

    When volunteer subjects were given the diagonally alternating stimuli, they perceived them as moving smoothly back and forth--and just as with the visual illusion, the direction of apparent motion flipped back and forth from vertical to horizontal, on average about twice per minute, even though there was no change in the stimulus itself.


    Clipped from: Laterotactile.com - Projects - Tactile Graphics

    Haptic Memory Game

    The video below describes the memory game and provides a good introduction to laterotactile skin stimulation.



    Sources:
    How You Feel The World Impacts How You See It
    MIT-led team creates touch-based illusion - MIT News Office
    Laterotactile.com - Projects - Tactile Graphics
    A Haptic Memory Game using the STReSS2 Tactile Display on Vimeo

    Related:
    What You See Is What You Feel -- Telis 2009 (409): 1 -- ScienceNOW
    In a Sensory Hack, What You Touch Affects What You See | 80beats | Discover Magazine
    Scientists create touch-based illusion
    Laterotactile.com - Devices - STReSS
    MIT : Brain and Cognitive Sciences : People : Faculty : Christopher Moore
    T.Konkle.Demos
    The Moore Lab
    Current Biology - Motion Aftereffects Transfer between Touch and Vision