EN
Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment
Abstract
Haptic technology, which refers to creating the sense of touch artificially, offers a crucial source of communication between humans and computers or machines. While conventional haptic devices are designed to render vibrotactile information on the fingertip, recent trends in the field expand the tactile communication to other body locations, like the wrist. Even though the literature has many successful applications showing the validity of such haptic applications, there is no study comparing the user perception for meaningful virtual or teleoperated task scenarios due to the lack of calibration methods between alternative body locations. In this paper, we attempt to compare the perceived intensities at the fingertip and the wrist through psychophysical experiments and to answer: (i) Is there a perpetual difference between the haptic stimuli on the wrist compared to the fingertip? (ii) Is possible to form a reasonable, linear relationship (or a pattern) between the stimuli rendered at the fingertip and the wrist? (iii) If so, do different users require different relationships that would need to be obtained through calibration? We designed a user study with 13 healthy participants, receiving three levels of haptic stimuli at their fingertips while adjusting the intensities of the stimuli rendered at their wrist using the method of adjustments. Our results indicate that there is a linear pattern between the vibrotactile stimuli rendered at the fingertip and the wrist, and each participant exhibits a different pattern. Our results can be used to equalize the perceived intensities of different forms of tactile stimuli for future research investigating the perceived performance under different haptic scenarios.
Keywords
Supporting Institution
TUBİTAK project 2232
Ethical Statement
We have the ethics approval for the user study experiment
References
- Kaliberda, M., Lytvynenko, L., & Pogarsky, S. (2017). Method of singular integral equations in diffraction by semi-infinite grating: $ H $-polarization case. Turkish Journal of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, 25(6), 4496-4509..
- Khosravi, H., Etemad, K., & Samavati, F. F. (2022). Mass simulation in VR using vibrotactile feedback and a co-located physically-based virtual hand. Computers & Graphics, 102, 120-132.
- Adenekan, R. A., Reyes, A. G., Yoshida, K. T., Kodali, S., Okamura, A. M., & Nunez, C. M. (2024). A comparative analysis of smartphone and standard tools for touch perception assessment across multiple body sites. IEEE Transactions on Haptics.
- Kim, J. I., Jo, G., Koo, J. H., Kim, D. J., Kim, Y. M., & Yang, T. H. (2022). Development of a Thin Vibrotactile Actuator Based on the Electrostatic Force Mechanism for Large Haptic Touch Interfaces. Mobile Information Systems, 2022(1), 8331923.
- Orozco, M., Silva, J., El Saddik, A., & Petriu, E. (2012). The role of haptics in games. Haptics rendering and applications, 217-234.
- Pacchierotti, C., Sinclair, S., Solazzi, M., Frisoli, A., Hayward, V., & Prattichizzo, D. (2017). Wearable haptic systems for the fingertip and the hand: taxonomy, review, and perspectives. IEEE transactions on haptics, 10(4), 580-600.
- Gibson, J. J. (1962). Observations on active touch. Psychological review, 69(6), 477.
- Corniani, G., & Saal, H. P. (2020). Tactile innervation densities across the whole body. Journal of Neurophysiology, 124(4), 1229-1240.
Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
Information Systems User Experience Design and Development, Electronic Sensors
Journal Section
Research Article
Early Pub Date
June 6, 2025
Publication Date
December 31, 2025
Submission Date
July 30, 2024
Acceptance Date
October 14, 2024
Published in Issue
Year 2025 Volume: 5 Number: 1
APA
Adeyemi, A., & Sarac, M. (2025). Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment. Journal of Emerging Computer Technologies, 5(1), 1-8. https://doi.org/10.57020/ject.1522842
AMA
1.Adeyemi A, Sarac M. Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment. JECT. 2025;5(1):1-8. doi:10.57020/ject.1522842
Chicago
Adeyemi, Ayoade, and Mine Sarac. 2025. “Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist Using Method of Adjustment”. Journal of Emerging Computer Technologies 5 (1): 1-8. https://doi.org/10.57020/ject.1522842.
EndNote
Adeyemi A, Sarac M (December 1, 2025) Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment. Journal of Emerging Computer Technologies 5 1 1–8.
IEEE
[1]A. Adeyemi and M. Sarac, “Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment”, JECT, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 1–8, Dec. 2025, doi: 10.57020/ject.1522842.
ISNAD
Adeyemi, Ayoade - Sarac, Mine. “Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist Using Method of Adjustment”. Journal of Emerging Computer Technologies 5/1 (December 1, 2025): 1-8. https://doi.org/10.57020/ject.1522842.
JAMA
1.Adeyemi A, Sarac M. Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment. JECT. 2025;5:1–8.
MLA
Adeyemi, Ayoade, and Mine Sarac. “Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist Using Method of Adjustment”. Journal of Emerging Computer Technologies, vol. 5, no. 1, Dec. 2025, pp. 1-8, doi:10.57020/ject.1522842.
Vancouver
1.Ayoade Adeyemi, Mine Sarac. Comparing the Psychophysical Capabilities on Fingertip and Wrist using Method of Adjustment. JECT. 2025 Dec. 1;5(1):1-8. doi:10.57020/ject.1522842
