Role of arm reaching movement kinematics in friction perception at initial contact with smooth surfaces

Author:

Afzal Naqash1234,du Bois de Dunilac Sophie5ORCID,Loutit Alastair J.12ORCID,Shea Helen O.6,Ulloa Pablo Martinez5,Khamis Heba7,Vickery Richard M.128,Wiertlewski Michaël9,Redmond Stephen J.5,Birznieks Ingvars128

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Sciences UNSW Sydney Sydney NSW Australia

2. Neuroscience Research Australia Sydney NSW Australia

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering Khalifa University Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates

4. Center for Autonomous Robotic Systems Khalifa University Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates

5. School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

6. Department of Psychology University of Limerick Limerick Ireland

7. Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering UNSW Sydney Sydney NSW Australia

8. Bionics and Biorobotics, Tyree Foundation Institute of Health Engineering UNSW Sydney Sydney NSW Australia

9. Department of Cognitive Robotics Delft University of Technology Delft The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractWhen manipulating objects, humans begin adjusting their grip force to friction within 100 ms of contact. During motor adaptation, subjects become aware of the slipperiness of touched surfaces. Previously, we have demonstrated that humans cannot perceive frictional differences when surfaces are brought in contact with an immobilised finger, but can do so when there is submillimeter lateral displacement or subjects actively make the contact movement. Similarly, in, we investigated how humans perceive friction in the absence of intentional exploratory sliding or rubbing movements, to mimic object manipulation interactions. We used a two‐alternative forced‐choice paradigm in which subjects had to reach and touch one surface followed by another, and then indicate which felt more slippery. Subjects correctly identified the more slippery surface in 87 ± 8% of cases (mean ± SD; n = 12). Biomechanical analysis of finger pad skin displacement patterns revealed the presence of tiny (<1 mm) localised slips, known to be sufficient to perceive frictional differences. We tested whether these skin movements arise as a result of natural hand reaching kinematics. The task was repeated with the introduction of a hand support, eliminating the hand reaching movement and minimising fingertip movement deviations from a straight path. As a result, our subjects’ performance significantly declined (66 ± 12% correct, mean ± SD; n = 12), suggesting that unrestricted reaching movement kinematics and factors such as physiological tremor, play a crucial role in enhancing or enabling friction perception upon initial contact. imageKey points More slippery objects require a stronger grip to prevent them from slipping out of hands. Grip force adjustments to friction driven by tactile sensory signals are largely automatic and do not necessitate cognitive involvement; nevertheless, some associated awareness of grip surface slipperiness under such sensory conditions is present and helps to select a safe and appropriate movement plan. When gripping an object, tactile receptors provide frictional information without intentional rubbing or sliding fingers over the surface. However, we have discovered that submillimeter range lateral displacement might be required to enhance or enable friction sensing. The present study provides evidence that such small lateral movements causing localised partial slips arise and are an inherent part of natural reaching movement kinematics.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference36 articles.

1. Submillimeter lateral displacement enables friction sensing and awareness of surface slipperiness;Afzal N.;Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Transactions on Haptics,2022

2. Perception of partial slips under tangential loading of the fingertip

3. Restoration of sensory information via bionic hands

4. Mechanisms for Force Adjustments to Unpredictable Frictional Changes at Individual Digits During Two-Fingered Manipulation

5. Tactile sensors for friction estimation and incipient slip detection—toward dexterous robotic manipulation: A review;Chen W.;Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Sensors Journal,2018

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