Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction

“Out of the body” tactile illusion refers to the phenomenon in which one can perceive tactility as if emanating from a location external to the body without any stimulator present there. Taking advantage of such a tactile illusion is one way to provide and realize richer interaction feedback without...

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Main Authors: Hye Jin Lee, Jaedong Lee, Chi Jung Kim, Gerard J. Kim, Eun-Soo Kim, Mincheol Whang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-04-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
EEG
ERP
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/15/4/7913
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spelling doaj-4be783f7a519459e8ac8e9445c8ec83c2020-11-24T21:52:50ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202015-04-011547913793210.3390/s150407913s150407913Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object InteractionHye Jin Lee0Jaedong Lee1Chi Jung Kim2Gerard J. Kim3Eun-Soo Kim4Mincheol Whang5Department of Emotion Engineering, Graduate School, Sangmyung University, 7 Hongji-dong, Jongro-Ku, Seoul 110-743, KoreaCollege of Information and Communications, Korea University, Anam-dong 5-ga, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 136-791, KoreaDepartment of Emotion Engineering, Graduate School, Sangmyung University, 7 Hongji-dong, Jongro-Ku, Seoul 110-743, KoreaCollege of Information and Communications, Korea University, Anam-dong 5-ga, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 136-791, KoreaHoloDigilog Human Media Research Center (HoloDigilog), 3D Research Center (3DRC), Kwangwoon University, 447-1Wolge-Dong, Nowon-Gu, Seoul 139-701, KoreaDepartment of Media Software, Sangmyung University, 7 Hongji-dong, Jongro-Ku, Seoul 110-743, Korea“Out of the body” tactile illusion refers to the phenomenon in which one can perceive tactility as if emanating from a location external to the body without any stimulator present there. Taking advantage of such a tactile illusion is one way to provide and realize richer interaction feedback without employing and placing actuators directly at all stimulation target points. However, to further explore its potential, it is important to better understand the underlying physiological and neural mechanism. As such, we measured the brain wave patterns during such tactile illusion and mapped out the corresponding brain activation areas. Participants were given stimulations at different levels with the intention to create veridical (i.e., non-illusory) and phantom sensations at different locations along an external hand-held virtual ruler. The experimental data and analysis indicate that both veridical and illusory sensations involve, among others, the parietal lobe, one of the most important components in the tactile information pathway. In addition, we found that as for the illusory sensation, there is an additional processing resulting in the delay for the ERP (event-related potential) and involvement by the limbic lobe. These point to regarding illusion as a memory and recognition task as a possible explanation. The present study demonstrated some basic understanding; how humans process “virtual” objects and the way associated tactile illusion is generated will be valuable for HCI (Human-Computer Interaction).http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/15/4/7913phantom sensationillusory feedbackfunnelingvibro-tactile feedbackneural mechanismEEGERP
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hye Jin Lee
Jaedong Lee
Chi Jung Kim
Gerard J. Kim
Eun-Soo Kim
Mincheol Whang
spellingShingle Hye Jin Lee
Jaedong Lee
Chi Jung Kim
Gerard J. Kim
Eun-Soo Kim
Mincheol Whang
Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction
Sensors
phantom sensation
illusory feedback
funneling
vibro-tactile feedback
neural mechanism
EEG
ERP
author_facet Hye Jin Lee
Jaedong Lee
Chi Jung Kim
Gerard J. Kim
Eun-Soo Kim
Mincheol Whang
author_sort Hye Jin Lee
title Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction
title_short Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction
title_full Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction
title_fullStr Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction
title_full_unstemmed Brain Process for Perception of the “Out of the Body” Tactile Illusion for Virtual Object Interaction
title_sort brain process for perception of the “out of the body” tactile illusion for virtual object interaction
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2015-04-01
description “Out of the body” tactile illusion refers to the phenomenon in which one can perceive tactility as if emanating from a location external to the body without any stimulator present there. Taking advantage of such a tactile illusion is one way to provide and realize richer interaction feedback without employing and placing actuators directly at all stimulation target points. However, to further explore its potential, it is important to better understand the underlying physiological and neural mechanism. As such, we measured the brain wave patterns during such tactile illusion and mapped out the corresponding brain activation areas. Participants were given stimulations at different levels with the intention to create veridical (i.e., non-illusory) and phantom sensations at different locations along an external hand-held virtual ruler. The experimental data and analysis indicate that both veridical and illusory sensations involve, among others, the parietal lobe, one of the most important components in the tactile information pathway. In addition, we found that as for the illusory sensation, there is an additional processing resulting in the delay for the ERP (event-related potential) and involvement by the limbic lobe. These point to regarding illusion as a memory and recognition task as a possible explanation. The present study demonstrated some basic understanding; how humans process “virtual” objects and the way associated tactile illusion is generated will be valuable for HCI (Human-Computer Interaction).
topic phantom sensation
illusory feedback
funneling
vibro-tactile feedback
neural mechanism
EEG
ERP
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/15/4/7913
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