Haptic discrimination of stimuli varying in amplitude and width
Publication date
2002
Authors
Louw, S.
Kappers, A.M.L.
Koenderink, J.J.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
We studied active haptic discrimination of the
geometrical features of an object. The geometrical
parameters under investigation were the amplitude and
width of a gaussian-shaped surface. Haptic discrimination
thresholds were measured with regard to three values of
these geometrical parameters. We found that humans
discriminate up to about 300 shapes when both amplitude
and width are extrapolated to the range between 1 :m and
1 m. Over this range, which covers the span of the arms,
the number of discriminations is small compared to the
number across the full range of chromaticities in vision.
Roughly speaking, humans are far better at discriminating
sharp (extensive amplitude and little width) gaussian
surfaces from smooth (small amplitude and extensive
width) ones than they are at discriminating small (small
amplitude and width) surfaces from large (extensive
amplitude and width) ones. Our main conclusion is that
discrimination in the geometrical domain is poorest when
the proportion between amplitude and width is roughly
the same for both shapes. Our results are in close
agreement with results of earlier experiments on detection
thresholds. This indicates that similar, or even the same,
neural mechanisms were used for detection and discrimination
of the geometrical parameters under investigation.