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Perception of Vibrotactile Cues in Musical Performance

TLDR
In this article, a review of the previous literature on vibrotactile perception in musical performance is presented, and the authors suggest that studies on active touch psychophysics are needed to inform the design of haptic musical interfaces and better understand the relevance of hapt cues in musical performances.
Abstract
We suggest that studies on active touch psychophysics are needed to inform the design of haptic musical interfaces and better understand the relevance of haptic cues in musical performance. Following a review of the previous literature on vibrotactile perception in musical performance, two recent experiments are reported. The first experiment investigated how active finger-pressing forces affect vibration perception, finding significant effects of vibration type and force level on perceptual thresholds. Moreover, the measured thresholds were considerably lower than those reported in the literature, possibly due to the concurrent effect of large (unconstrained) finger contact areas, active pressing forces, and long-duration stimuli. The second experiment assessed the validity of these findings in a real musical context by studying the detection of vibrotactile cues at the keyboard of a grand and an upright piano. Sensitivity to key vibrations in fact not only was highest at the lower octaves and gradually decreased toward higher pitches; it was also significant for stimuli having spectral peaks of acceleration similar to those of the first experiment, i.e., below the standard sensitivity thresholds measured for sinusoidal vibrations under passive touch conditions.

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Citations
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Integration of touch and sound in auditory cortex

TL;DR: In this paper, high-resolution fMRI of the macaque monkey was used to quantify the integration of auditory broadband noise and tactile stimulation of hand and foot in anaesthetized animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Co-Design of Musical Haptic Wearables for Electronic Music Performer's Communication

TL;DR: A user-centered design methodology was adopted to develop a novel class of IoT devices that are designed to address creative communication issues among performers in electronic music practice and provide evidence that musical haptic wearables can be an effective medium of communication in the context of electronic music performances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining a vibrotactile toolkit for digital musical instruments: characterizing voice coil actuators, effects of loading, and equalization of the frequency response

TL;DR: This paper evaluates cost-effective and portable solutions allowing for independent control of frequency and amplitude over a wide frequency bandwidth and low harmonic distortion, so that flexible and high-quality vibrotactile feedback can be displayed and compares the result of equalization by performing sinesweep measurements on the implementation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactive Vibrotactile Feedback Enhances the Perceived Quality of a Surface for Musical Expression and the Playing Experience

TL;DR: In this article, a subjective assessment was conducted that measured how the presence and type of vibration affect the perceived quality of the device and various attributes related to the playing experience and the perceived potential for musical expressivity.

Multisensory integration in percussion performance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how auditory and haptic information concerning objects hardness is integrated for the purpose of controlling the velocity with which we strike an object and found that the haptic changes could be congruent (e.g., both increased in hardness) or incongruent.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial patterns of cutaneous vibration during whole-hand haptic interactions

TL;DR: It is shown that during natural interactions with ordinary objects, mechanical energy originating at finger contact propagates through the whole hand, and that vibration signals that are captured remotely contain sufficient information to discriminate between gestures and between the touched objects.
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Factors influencing vibration sense thresholds used to assess occupational exposures to hand transmitted vibration

TL;DR: It was apparent that the physiological characteristics of vibration sensation at low and high frequencies differed significantly, suggesting that two representative frequencies can be used when evaluation the neurological effects of occupational exposures to vibration by means of vibration sense thresholds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some characteristics of tactile channels.

TL;DR: The four information-processing channels of glabrous skin have distinct tuning characteristics which appear to be determined in the periphery at the level of sensory receptors and their afferent nerve fibers, psychophysically determined by forward-masking and adaptation tuning curve methods.
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Vibrotactile intensity discrimination measured by three methods.

TL;DR: A "near miss" to Weber's law was found both for sinusoidal and for noise stimuli, and the difference threshold was not affected by stimulus frequency condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Complex tactile waveform discrimination

TL;DR: It was found that the low-frequency waveforms were discriminable from one another while discrimination of the high-frequency vibrations was poor, suggesting that the RA channel mediated discrimination.
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