tactile stimulator
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariama Dione ◽  
Roger Holmes Watkins ◽  
Eric Vezzoli ◽  
Betty Lemaire-Semail ◽  
Johan Wessberg

AbstractThe forces that are developed when manipulating objects generate sensory cues that inform the central nervous system about the qualities of the object’s surface and the status of the hand/object interaction. Afferent responses to frictional transients or slips have been studied in the context of lifting/holding tasks. Here, we used microneurography and an innovative tactile stimulator, the Stimtac, to modulate both the friction level of a surface, without changing the surface or adding a lubricant, and, to generate the frictional transients in a pure and net fashion. In three protocols, we manipulated: the frictional transients, the friction levels, the rise times, the alternation of phases of decrease or increase in friction to emulate grating-like stimuli. Afferent responses were recorded in 2 FAIs, 1 FAII, 2 SAIs and 3 SAIIs from the median nerve of human participants. Independently of the unit type, we observed that: single spikes were generated time-locked to the frictional transients, and that reducing the friction level reduced the number of spikes during the stable phase of the stimulation. Our results suggest that those frictional cues are encoded in all the unit types and emphasize the possibility to use the Stimtac device to control mechanoreceptor firing with high temporal precision.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulia Ballardini ◽  
Giorgio Carlini ◽  
Psiche Giannoni ◽  
Robert A. Scheidt ◽  
Ilana Nisky ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 1692-1701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wael Ben Messaoud ◽  
Frederic Giraud ◽  
Betty Lemaire-Semail ◽  
Michel Amberg ◽  
Marie-Ange Bueno

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (110) ◽  
pp. 20150495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre-Henri Cornuault ◽  
Luc Carpentier ◽  
Marie-Ange Bueno ◽  
Jean-Marc Cote ◽  
Guy Monteil

This study investigates how the fingerpad hydrolipid film, shape, roughness and rigidity influence the friction when it rubs surfaces situated in the slippery psychophysical dimension. The studied counterparts comprised two ‘real’ (physical) surfaces and two ‘virtual’ surfaces. The latter were simulated with a tactile stimulator named STIMTAC. Thirteen women and 13 men rubbed their right forefingers against the different surfaces as their arms were displaced by a DC motor providing constant velocity and sliding distance. Tangential and normal forces were measured with a specific tribometer. The fingerpad hydrolipid film was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The shape and roughness of fingers were extrapolated from replicas. Indentation measurements were carried out to determine fingerpad effective elastic modulus. A clear difference was observed between women and men in terms of friction behaviour. The concept of tactile frictional contrast (TFC) which was introduced quantifies an individual's propensity to distinguish two surfaces frictionally. The lipids/water ratio and water amount on the finger skin significantly influenced the TFC. A correlation was observed between the TFC and fingerpad roughness, i.e. the height of the fingerpad ridges. This is essentially owing to gender differences. A significant difference between men's and women's finger topography was also noted, because our results suggested that men have rougher fingers than women. The friction measurements did not correlate with the fingerpad curvature nor with the epidermal ridges' spatial period.


Author(s):  
Sofiane Ghenna ◽  
Frederic Giraud ◽  
Christophe Giraud-Audine ◽  
Michel Amberg ◽  
Betty Lemaire-Semail

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