Computer users could soon be able to "sense and touch" 3D objects displayed
on their screens, thanks to a 'haptic' touch-based interface developed at
Carnegie
Mellon University.
Most
haptic
interfaces rely on motors and mechanical links to provide some sense of
touch or force feedback.
But the device developed by Ralph Hollis, a research professor at Carnegie
Mellon's
Robotics
Institute, uses magnetic levitation and a single moving part to give users a
"highly realistic" experience.
Professor Hollis said that users can perceive textures, feel hard contacts
and notice even slight changes in position while using an interface that
responds rapidly to movements.
"We believe this device provides the most realistic sense of touch of any
haptic interface in the world today," said Professor Hollis, whose research
group built a working version of the device in 1997.
At the heart of the maglev haptic interface is a
bowl-shaped
device called a flotor embedded with six coils of wire.
Electric current flowing through the coils interacts with powerful permanent
magnets underneath, causing the flotor to levitate.
A control handle is attached to the flotor. A user moves the handle much like
a computer mouse, but in three dimensions with six degrees of freedom: up/down,
side to side, back/forth, yaw, pitch and roll.
Optical sensors measure the position and orientation of the flotor, and this
information is used to control the position and orientation of a virtual object
on the computer display.
As this virtual object encounters other virtual surfaces and objects,
corresponding signals are transmitted to the flotor's electrical coils,
resulting in haptic feedback to the user.
Professor Hollis and his colleagues have improved the interface's
performance, enhanced its ergonomics and lowered its cost with the help of a
$300,000
National
Science Foundation grant.
The grant also enabled the team to build 10 copies of the device, six of
which are being distributed to haptic researchers across the US and Canada.
"We have gone from the prototype to a much more advanced system that other
researchers can use," said Professor Hollis.
"Putting the instrument in the hands of other researchers is critical in a
young, developing field such as haptic technology."
Devices will be delivered to researchers at the universities of Harvard,
Stanford, Purdue, Cornell, Utah and British Columbia.
The academic institutions are members of the
Magnetic
Levitation Haptic Consortium, an international group dedicated to fostering
increased use of the technology.
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