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허성국

Heo, Seongkook
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Evaluating the Physics and Repeatability of Human Brushers in Delivering Affective Touch

Author(s)
Landsman, Zackary T.Clark, MatthewHeo, SeongkookDoryab, AfsanehGerling, Gregory J.
Issued Date
2026-01
DOI
10.1109/TOH.2025.3647371
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/91178
Fulltext
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/11311560
Citation
IEEE Transactions on Haptics, v.19, no.1, pp.42 - 53
Abstract
Research in affective touch often utilizes a pleasant stroking paradigm, with touch typically delivered at velocities between 0.3-30 cm/s and forces about 0.4 N. These values are derived from perceptual and physiological responses of touch receivers rather than natural behaviors of touchers. Herein, we observe untrained touchers in delivering pleasant touch as gentle strokes to a receiver's forearm through high-resolution force and position measurement using an instrumented brush. Twenty participants delivered about eleven strokes in each of five trials, yielding data on stroke velocity, force, duration, and length. The cohort deployed forces (0.37 N ± 0.24, 2 SD) near 0.4 N, but stroking velocities (13.7 cm/s ± 8.8, 2 SD) slightly higher than typically considered “optimal” (1-10 cm/s). We observed no correlation between stroke force and velocity, which led us to consider these factors jointly in characterizing an individual's brushing strategy. Moreover, while the cohort of participants exhibited a compact range of forces and velocities, individuals tended to occupy only subsets of this range with high repeatability across trials. Altogether, the findings suggest a need to further evaluate the velocity range between 10-30 cm/s and to jointly consider force, velocity, and consistency in characterizing an individual's brushing strategy. © 2008-2011 IEEE.
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
ISSN
1939-1412
Keyword (Author)
affective touchbrushinginstrumentationnaturalistic touchpleasant touchprecisionrepeatability

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