4.5 Article

To Move or Not to Move: Development of Fine-Tuning of Object Motion in Haptic Exploration

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCDS.2020.3034014

Keywords

Faces; Haptic interfaces; Task analysis; Pins; Robot sensing systems; Protocols; Micromechanical devices; Development of skills in biological systems and robots; haptic and tactile perception; sensorimotor development

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This study investigates the changes in exploratory strategies in children and finds that freely movable stimuli provide a strategic advantage by reducing the time and number of touches required. Visuo-haptic tasks are adult-like at the age of seven, while haptic exploration is less effective until the age of nine. The fine-tuning of object movements increases significantly with age in accordance with task constraints.
Recognizing objects through touch is a complex task based on integrating information coming from multiple senses and motor commands guiding the exploratory motions. To gain insight into the development of exploratory strategies in children, in this study, we addressed the question: how does exploration change when the stimulus becomes freely movable rather than fixed? We tested whether the possibility to move the object ushers in a strategic advantage, reducing the time and the number of touches necessary. We analyzed how school-aged children explore iCube, which is a sensorized cube measuring its orientation in space and contacts location. We tasked participants with finding specific cube faces; they could only touch the static cube, move and touch it, or move, touch, and look at it. Visuo-haptic performances were adult-like at seven years of age, whereas haptic exploration was less effective until nine years. The fine-tuning of object movements as a function of task constraints, e.g., the availability of the vision or blind haptic task, increased significantly with age. Shedding light on how different factors shape haptic exploration could help researchers in the pursuit of detecting the occurrence of abnormal exploratory behaviors early on during the development, providing a novel approach to detecting perceptual problems.

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