Cross-modal visual and vibrotactile tracking

article
The present study investigates tracking performance with tactile and/or visual presentation of target and cursor. The tactile display consisted of vibrators in a horizontal linear array on the torso, the visual display consisted of dots projected on a horizontal plane surrounding the observer. Both displays presented qualitatively identical information: direction in a horizontal plane.
Participants performed two different tracking tasks with target and cursor presented to the same modality (either visual or tactile) or to different modalities (a visual target and a tactile cursor or vice versa). The errors in both cross-modal settings were well predicted by the uni-modal errors. This indicates that no additional costs are involved in cross-modal visual-vibrotactile tracking. Closer inspection of the data reveals that the tactile modality is less suited for processing external disturbances. These results give directions on how to allocate information to the visual and tactile modalities in a multi-modal tracking interface, such as those applied in military cockpits.
TNO Identifier
12938
Source
Applied ergonomics, 35, pp. 105-112.
Pages
105-112
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