Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering

This paper proposes a novel method of manipulating both thermal change rate and thermal intensity to convey colour information by using a thermal tactile display. The colour-space transformation from {red, green, blue} to {hue, saturation, intensity} is introduced, and the mapping between colour and...

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Main Authors: Zhen Jia, Jianqing Li, Congyan Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-11-01
Series:International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5772/61741
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spelling doaj-5a2eb3294d42447b87dca62befa041a82020-11-25T03:06:44ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems1729-88142015-11-011210.5772/6174110.5772_61741Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour RenderingZhen Jia0Jianqing Li1Congyan Chen2 School of Instrument Science and Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, China School of Instrument Science and Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, China School of Automation, Southeast University, Nanjing, ChinaThis paper proposes a novel method of manipulating both thermal change rate and thermal intensity to convey colour information by using a thermal tactile display. The colour-space transformation from {red, green, blue} to {hue, saturation, intensity} is introduced, and the mapping between colour and temperature is established based on warm and cold colours. Considering the lower resolution of the tactile channel, six limited stimulation levels are generated to represent colours. Based on the semi-infinite body model, the thermal response within the skin for each stimulation form is investigated. The Peltier element of the display is designed to convey different thermal stimuli to the human finger. Two experiments are performed to evaluate the performance of the display: colour identification and discrimination. Experimental results indicate that there is a response bias among the perceived colours for the traditional method of only employing thermal intensity, but there is no response bias for the proposed method; subjects’ mean recognition accuracy with the proposed method is significantly higher than that gained using the traditional method. Furthermore, colour information of the captured images can be reliably discriminated by using this devised thermal tactile display.https://doi.org/10.5772/61741
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhen Jia
Jianqing Li
Congyan Chen
spellingShingle Zhen Jia
Jianqing Li
Congyan Chen
Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering
International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
author_facet Zhen Jia
Jianqing Li
Congyan Chen
author_sort Zhen Jia
title Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering
title_short Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering
title_full Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering
title_fullStr Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering
title_full_unstemmed Design and Evaluation of a Thermal Tactile Display for Colour Rendering
title_sort design and evaluation of a thermal tactile display for colour rendering
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
issn 1729-8814
publishDate 2015-11-01
description This paper proposes a novel method of manipulating both thermal change rate and thermal intensity to convey colour information by using a thermal tactile display. The colour-space transformation from {red, green, blue} to {hue, saturation, intensity} is introduced, and the mapping between colour and temperature is established based on warm and cold colours. Considering the lower resolution of the tactile channel, six limited stimulation levels are generated to represent colours. Based on the semi-infinite body model, the thermal response within the skin for each stimulation form is investigated. The Peltier element of the display is designed to convey different thermal stimuli to the human finger. Two experiments are performed to evaluate the performance of the display: colour identification and discrimination. Experimental results indicate that there is a response bias among the perceived colours for the traditional method of only employing thermal intensity, but there is no response bias for the proposed method; subjects’ mean recognition accuracy with the proposed method is significantly higher than that gained using the traditional method. Furthermore, colour information of the captured images can be reliably discriminated by using this devised thermal tactile display.
url https://doi.org/10.5772/61741
work_keys_str_mv AT zhenjia designandevaluationofathermaltactiledisplayforcolourrendering
AT jianqingli designandevaluationofathermaltactiledisplayforcolourrendering
AT congyanchen designandevaluationofathermaltactiledisplayforcolourrendering
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