AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how our brain processes changes in the perception of haptic stiffness using a specialized interface that can alter its stiffness through air pressure manipulation in a particle-filled pouch.
  • Participants engaged in a task that required them to apply consistent fingertip pressure while the softness or hardness of the interface was randomly altered, allowing researchers to track brain activity in response to these stiffness changes.
  • The findings reveal that distinct areas of the brain are activated for different stiffness levels and emphasize the importance of separating motor and sensory signals to accurately map somatosensory cortex function, showcasing the potential of particle-jamming haptic technology for brain research.

Article Abstract

We demonstrate reliable neural responses to changes in haptic stiffness perception using a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) compatible particle-jamming haptic interface. Our haptic interface consists of a silicone tactile surface whose stiffness we can control by modulating air-pressure in a sub-surface pouch of coarsely ground particles. The particles jam together as the pressure decreases, which stiffens the surface. During fMRI acquisition, subjects performed a constant probing task, which involved continuous contact between the index fingertip and the interface and rhythmic increases and decreases in fingertip force (1.6 Hz) to probe stiffness. Without notifying subjects, we randomly switched the interface's stiffness (switch time, 300-500 ms) from soft (200 N/m) to hard (1400 N/m). Our experiment design's constant motor activity and cutaneous tactile sensation helped disassociate neural activation for both from stiffness perception, which helped localized it to a narrow region in somatosensory cortex near the supra-marginal gyrus. Testing different models of neural activation, we found that assuming indepedent stiffness-change responses at both soft-hard and hard-soft transitions provides the best explanation for observed fMRI measurements (three subjects; nine four-minute scan runs each). Furthermore, we found that neural activation related to stiffness-change and absolute stiffness can be localized to adjacent but disparate anatomical locations. We also show that classical finger-tapping experiments activate a swath of cortex and are not suitable for localizing stiffness perception. Our results demonstrate that decorrelating motor and sensory neural activation is essential for characterizing somatosensory cortex, and establish particle-jamming haptics as an attractive low-cost method for fMRI experiments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944019DOI Listing

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