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      Creating Realistic Virtual Textures from Contact Acceleration Data.

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          Abstract

          Modern haptic interfaces are adept at conveying the large-scale shape of virtual objects, but they often provide unrealistic or no feedback when it comes to the microscopic details of surface texture. Direct texture-rendering challenges the state of the art in haptics because it requires a finely detailed model of the surface's properties, real-time dynamic simulation of complex interactions, and high-bandwidth haptic output to enable the user to feel the resulting contacts. This paper presents a new, fully realized solution for creating realistic virtual textures. Our system employs a sensorized handheld tool to capture the feel of a given texture, recording three-dimensional tool acceleration, tool position, and contact force over time. We reduce the three-dimensional acceleration signals to a perceptually equivalent one-dimensional signal, and then we use linear predictive coding to distill this raw haptic information into a database of frequency-domain texture models. Finally, we render these texture models in real time on a Wacom tablet using a stylus augmented with small voice coil actuators. The resulting virtual textures provide a compelling simulation of contact with the real surfaces, which we verify through a human subject study.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          IEEE Trans Haptics
          IEEE transactions on haptics
          Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
          1939-1412
          1939-1412
          April 1 2012
          : 5
          : 2
          Article
          10.1109/TOH.2011.38
          26964067
          a531671a-027a-487c-94d5-c008ec7445f1
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