|
 |

The research of the Cutaneous
Communication Laboratory has implications for the development
of sensory aids for deaf, blind, and deaf-blind persons, and also
for those interested in perceptual processes per se. Our aim is
to help those people developing devices for sensory impaired people
using the skin as the alternative input medium. We do basic research
that illuminates how information can be best transmitted through
the skin. Our research questions range from the simple ("How
intense must a vibration be for you to feel it?") to the complex
("What mechanisms account for the mistakes that people make
when trying to identify letters of the alphabet presented close
together in time?"). Our experiments involve presenting patterns
through contactors that touch the skin. The patterns are produced
by the movement (vibration) of the contactors creating a buzzing
sensation. This laboratory has had a long-standing interest in both
basic and applied research projects. The majority of basic studies
with single-site stimuli have used Bimorph or Bruel
& Kjaer tactor systems. More complex displays have used
the arrays from devices such as the Optacon© and Audiological
Engineering's Tactaid-7© to explore the individual differences
in tactile pattern processing. We have also been involved in the
development and evaluation of new display technologies, such as
Sensor Electronics' (Medford, NJ) MTAC high-density array and their
Roto-Oscillating Crown tactor system, as well as the Tactile
Situation Awareness System (TSAS) developed at the Naval Aerospace
Medical Research Laboratory in Pensacola FL. Currently the efforts
of the Cutaneous Laboratory are concentrated on examining how close
together vibrating stimuli can be without fusing into one percept,
particularly in older persons, and how this is affected by the body
site being touched, and the characteristics of the stimuli.
To visit the lab's official website, click
here.
DIRECTOR: Roger
W. Cholewiak, Ph.D.
Amy
A. Collins, B.A. | Carl
E. Sherrick, Ph.D..
|
 |