Publications by authors named "Christopher Brill"

Trust exerts an impact on essentially all forms of social relationships. It affects individuals in deciding whether and how they will or will not interact with other people. Equally, trust also influences the stance of entire nations in their mutual dealings.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The present meta-analysis sought to determine significant factors that predict trust in artificial intelligence (AI). Such factors were divided into those relating to (a) the human trustor, (b) the AI trustee, and (c) the shared context of their interaction.

Background: There are many factors influencing trust in robots, automation, and technology in general, and there have been several meta-analytic attempts to understand the antecedents of trust in these areas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study, we examined how spatially informative auditory and tactile cues affected participants' performance on a visual search task while they simultaneously performed a secondary auditory task. Visual search task performance was assessed via reaction time and accuracy. Tactile and auditory cues provided the approximate location of the visual target within the search display.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Under the influence of homogeneous, rotating magnetic fields, superparamagnetic beads can be assembled into one- and two-dimensional superstructures on demand and used as dynamic components in microfluidic systems for colloidal separation. In this paper, the influence of the magnetic field strength and the rotation frequency on the device efficiency is studied. The optimum region is found to be between 100 and 200 rpm for a magnetic field strength of 330 Oe, while the highest value for separated mass per time (28 pg s(-1)) is achieved for a flow velocity of 370 μm s(-1) at a magnetic field strength of 690 Oe.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study, we explore the conditions for accurate localization of vibrotactile stimuli presented to the abdomen. Tactile orientation systems intended to provide mobility information for people who are blind depend on accurate identification of location of stimuli on the skin, as do systems designed to indicate target positions in space or the status of remotely operated devices to pilots or engineers. The spatial acuity of the skin has been examined for simple touch, but not for the types of vibrating signals used in such devices.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF