@proceedings {1685, title = {Understanding the Role of Haptic Feedback in a Teleoperated Grasp and Lift Task}, year = {2013}, month = {04/2013}, pages = {271-276}, abstract = {

Achieving dexterous volitional control of an upper-limb prosthetic device will require multimodal sensory feedback that goes beyond vision. Haptic display is well-positioned to provide this additional sensory information. Haptic display, however, includes a diverse set of modalities that encode information differently. We have begun to make a comparison between two of these modalities, force feedback spanning the elbow, and amplitude-modulated vibrotactile feedback, based on performance in a functional grasp and lift task. In randomly ordered trials, we assessed the performance of N=11 participants (8 able-bodied, 3 amputee) attempting to grasp and lift an object using an EMG controlled gripper under three feedback conditions (no feedback, vibrotactile feedback, and force feed-back), and two object weights that were undetectable by vision. Preliminary results indicate differences between able-bodied and amputee participants in coordination of grasp and lift forces. In addition, both force feedback and vibrotactile feedback contribute to significantly better task performance (fewer slips) and better adaptation following an unpredicted weight change. This suggests that the development and utilization of internal models for predictive control is more intuitive in the presence of haptic feedback.

}, attachments = {https://mahilab.rice.edu/sites/default/files/publications/WH2013_FINAL_PRESS_Brown_et_al.pdf}, author = {Jeremy D. Brown and Andrew Paek and Mashaal Syed and Marcia K. O{\textquoteright}Malley and Patricia Shewokis and Jose L. Contreras-Vidal and R. B. Gillespie} }