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Haptic Pen: A Tactile Feedback Stylus for Touch Screens
Johnny C. Lee1,2 Paul H. Dietz2 Darren Leigh2 William S. Yerazunis2 Scott E. Hudson1 1Carnegie Mellon University 2Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs Santa Fe, NM UIST 2004
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Last Year… [Poupyrev and Maruyama, UIST 2003]
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Our Goals: Support large touch-sensitive displays.
Support multiple simultaneous users.
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Our Goals: Our Solution: Support large touch-sensitive displays.
Support multiple simultaneous users. Our Solution: Haptic Pen - Feedback not tied to display - Individualized feedback - Pressure Sensitivity - Non-Contact Location data - Low-cost
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Prototype Implementation
External control board and power supply. RS-232 interface to PC. Components in prototype cost ~$10. Diamond Touch Interface [Dietz, UIST’01] - DT is a Multi-user front-projected touch table - Haptic Pen is location technology agnostic
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Tactile Styli Anoto Pen (by Logitech) eccentric mass motor
SensAble PHANTOM grounded reflective-force
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Tactile Styli Anoto Pen (by Logitech) eccentric mass motor
SensAble PHANTOM grounded reflective-force
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Anoto Pen (by Logitech)
Tactile Styli Buzzing is sufficient for interaction feedback. Impulse/High-Frequency forces necessary to simulate clicks are not possible. Lateral forces are unnatural. Anoto Pen (by Logitech) eccentric mass motor
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Force Vectors
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Force Vectors Longitudinal Lateral
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Longitudinal Force
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Longitudinal Force along same force vector
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Lateral Force lateral force is unnatural
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Accelerometer Comparison
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Solenoid Actions
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Haptic Behaviors Haptic Behavior – a mapping of solenoid actions to the states and transitions of an interaction. Basic Click:
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Haptic Behaviors for Buttons
No Click – No feedback, primarily for control comparison Light Click – Light threshold, weak feedback (“ballpoint pen”) Basic Click – Medium threshold, medium feedback Hard Click – High threshold, strong feedback (“punch tool”) Buzz – Fixed strength buzz when pressed (“error”) Force Buzz – Proportional strength buzz (“dentist”) Two-Click – Two level button (“camera shutter”) Buzz-Click – Two level button (“test and confirm”)
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Interaction Concepts Multi-function buttons Input error feedback
Two-Click for mapping stylus single & double click Stiff confirmation buttons Toggle switches – Light Click on, Hard Click off Data Peeking – stiffness driven by hidden variable Tactile Alerts – Continuous contact with user Targeting – buzzing driven by proximity, region, or direction. More in the paper…
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Off the Screen Haptic Pen + Anoto Tracking =
Drawable Tactile Interfaces 3D tracking allows tactile feedback on any registered surface.
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Future Directions Develop more robust and compact prototypes and explore a wireless implementation Explore tasks which have the greatest potential for improvement in performance and user satisfaction Develop hardware and software technologies for multi-user tactile applications
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Thanks for coming to UIST 2004!
Johnny Chung Lee Carnegie Mellon University Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs
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Techno-mumbo-jumbo PIC16F876 with 10-bit A/D and 10-bit PWM
5mm force sensitive resistor (CUI SF-5) 16.1mm push-type solenoid (Guardian Electric) Actuated mass: 26.7g Supply Voltage: 20V Min. Hold Continuous Current: < 1mA Impulse Capacitor: 20V Min. Response Time: 5ms Max. Energy: ~50mJ
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