The influence of fingerprints and their curvature in tactile sensing performance is investigated by comparative analysis of different design parameters in a biomimetic artificial fingertip, having straight or curved fingerprints. The strength in the encoding of the principal spatial period of ridged tactile stimuli (gratings) is evaluated by indenting and sliding the surfaces at controlled normal contact force and tangential sliding velocity, as a function of fingertip rotation along the indentation axis. Curved fingerprints guaranteed higher directional isotropy than straight fingerprints in the encoding of the principal frequency resulting from the ratio between the sliding velocity and the spatial periodicity of the grating. In parallel, human microneurography experiments were performed and a selection of results is included in this work in order to support the significance of the biorobotic study with the artificial tactile system.

Oddo, C., Beccai, L., Wessberg, J., Wasling, H., Mattioli, F., Carrozza, M. (2011). Roughness Encoding in Human and Biomimetic Artificial Touch: Spatiotemporal Frequency Modulation and Structural Anisotropy of Fingerprints. SENSORS, 11(6), 5596-5615 [10.3390/s110605596].

Roughness Encoding in Human and Biomimetic Artificial Touch: Spatiotemporal Frequency Modulation and Structural Anisotropy of Fingerprints

Carrozza M. C.
2011

Abstract

The influence of fingerprints and their curvature in tactile sensing performance is investigated by comparative analysis of different design parameters in a biomimetic artificial fingertip, having straight or curved fingerprints. The strength in the encoding of the principal spatial period of ridged tactile stimuli (gratings) is evaluated by indenting and sliding the surfaces at controlled normal contact force and tangential sliding velocity, as a function of fingertip rotation along the indentation axis. Curved fingerprints guaranteed higher directional isotropy than straight fingerprints in the encoding of the principal frequency resulting from the ratio between the sliding velocity and the spatial periodicity of the grating. In parallel, human microneurography experiments were performed and a selection of results is included in this work in order to support the significance of the biorobotic study with the artificial tactile system.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Artificial touch; Biomimetic fingertip; Biorobotics; Fingerprints; Human touch; Mechanoreceptors; MEMS tactile sensor array; Microneurography; Roughness encoding;
English
2011
11
6
5596
5615
open
Oddo, C., Beccai, L., Wessberg, J., Wasling, H., Mattioli, F., Carrozza, M. (2011). Roughness Encoding in Human and Biomimetic Artificial Touch: Spatiotemporal Frequency Modulation and Structural Anisotropy of Fingerprints. SENSORS, 11(6), 5596-5615 [10.3390/s110605596].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/559359
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