19
The Frontiers of HCI Haptics, Smell and Brain Interaction

Haptics, Smell and Brain Interaction

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Frontiers of HCI. Haptics, Smell and Brain Interaction. Learning Outcomes. Describe how haptics are used on Mobile devices Medical devices Research tools Describe the exploration of Olfactory detection and production Brain wave detection. The Human Perceptual System. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

The Frontiers of HCI

Haptics, Smell and Brain Interaction

Page 2: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Learning Outcomes

• Describe how haptics are used on– Mobile devices– Medical devices– Research tools

• Describe the exploration of – Olfactory detection and production– Brain wave detection

Page 3: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

The Human Perceptual System

• Physical Aspects of Perception– Touch (tactile/cutaneous)• Located in the skin, enables us to feel – Texture – Heat– Pain

– Movement (kinesthetic/proprioceptive)• The location of your body and its appendages• The direction and speed of your movements

1-3

Page 4: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Physical Aspects of Perception

• Movement (kinesthetic/proprioceptive)– We use the angles of our joints to determine the

position of our limbs– We determine movement by the rate of change in

the position of those joints

1-4

Page 5: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Mobile devices

• Phone output– Vibrate – silent alert. • These can be used like earcons – different signals for

different events• Does your phone have different alerts?

– Can you tell the difference?

1-5

Page 6: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Mobile devices

• Phone input– Touch screens

• See previous lecture

– Accelerometer - shaking actions • Inconsistent interactions, high error rates

– Passive input• Gps• Altimeter • Temperature • Humidity

1-6

Page 7: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Using Haptics in Interaction Design

• ImmersiveTouch™

1-7

Page 8: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Using Haptics in Interaction Design

• Medical Uses– surgeon controls ‘robot’ – Surgeon’s view zoomed– Small device reduces invasiveness– ~~$2mill

1-8

Page 9: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Using Haptics in Interaction Design

• The GuideCane (Ulrich and Borenstein, 2001)

1-9

Page 10: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Using Haptics in Interaction Design

• The ActiveBelt (Tsukada and Yasumrua, 2004)

1-10

Device architecture of ActiveBelt

GPS, global positioning system; LED, light-emitting diode.

Page 11: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Using Haptics in Interaction Design

• Motor Disabilities– HAL-5 (Hybrid Assistive Limb), CYBERDYNE Inc.

www.cyberdyne.jp

1-11

Page 12: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Force Feedback Displays

– Manipulator Gloves

1-12

CyberForc

e

CyberGraspCyberGlove

II

Page 13: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Technical Issues Concerning Haptics

• Desktop Devices– SensAble PHANTOM haptic devices

1-13

PHANTOM Premium

McSig – our work with visually

impairedhttp://dl.acm.org.ezproxy.auckland.ac.nz/citation.cfm?

id=1993060.1993067&coll=DL&dl=ACM&CFID=333467105&CFTOKEN=52399920

Page 14: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Technical Issues Concerning Haptics

• Desktop Devices– Space Interface Device for Artificial Reality (SPIDAR)

(Sato, 2002)

1-14

SPIDAR-8. Finger attachments.SPIDAR-8. Rubik’s CubePHANTOM Premium 1.5 & 1.5 high-force haptic

device

Page 15: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Olfactory - Odour/ Smell

• Smell is essentially our ability to detect specific chemical particles in the air

• We can detect about 4000 different smells• And the can be combined in millions different

ways • Smell is very deep

in our animal brain

1-15

Page 16: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Technology of Odour

• Input – Detecting particular chemicals is possible • Drug/ explosive sniffers

– Detecting the range of smells in anything like human terms and extremely difficult task

• Output– Manufacturing particular smells possible ‘fresh

cookies’– Active generation of range of smells very difficult

– too many chemicals and too supple differences

1-16

Page 17: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Smell – current research

• Not sure how many different smells can begenerated.

• Check out the video

• Yongsoon Choi, Rahul Parsani, Xavier Roman, Anshul Vikram Pandey, and Adrian David Cheok. 2012. Sound perfume: building positive impression during face-to-face communication. In SIGGRAPH Asia 2012 Emerging Technologies (SA '12). ACM, New York, NY, USA, , Article 22 , 3 pages. DOI=10.1145/2407707.2407729 http://doi.acm.org.ezproxy.auckland.ac.nz/10.1145/2407707.2407729

1-17

Page 18: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Brain Computer Interact

• Detecting the brain waves and interpreting• Inside the skull – accurate but invasive http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogBX18maUiM

• From outside the skull – not very accurate

1-18

Page 19: Haptics,  Smell and Brain Interaction

Summary • Describe how haptics are used on

– Mobile devices • Output – vibrate• Input accelerometers & gps

– Medical devices• Keyhole surgery with remote tool guidance

– Research tools• Haptic pen input and output devices – move in full 3D space

• Describe the exploration of – Olfactory detection and production

• Detection of specific chemicals possible • Production of a limited range of scents

– Brain wave detection• Many new devices to gather brain activity from cap sensors, • still fairly limited interaction