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IEEE Virtual Reality Conference 2003 (VR 2003)
A Taxonomy and Comparison of Haptic Actions for Disassembly Tasks
Los Angeles, CA
March 22-March 26
ISBN: 0-7695-1882-6
Aaron Bloomfield, University of Pennsylvania
Yu Deng, University of Pennsylvania
Jeff Wampler, Air Force Research Laboratory
Pascale Rondot, GE Global Research
Norman Badler, University of Pennsylvania
The usefulness of modern day haptics equipment for virtual simulations of actual maintenance actions is examined. In an effort to categorize which areas haptic simulations may be useful, we have developed a taxonomy for haptic actions. This classification has two major dimensions: the general type of action performed and the type of force or torque required. Building upon this taxonomy, we selected three representative tasks from the taxonomy to evaluate in a virtual reality simulation. We conducted a series of human subject experiments to compare user performance and preference on a disassembly task with and without haptic feedback using CyberGlove, Phantom, and SpaceMouse interfaces. Analysis of the simulation runs shows Phantom users learned to accomplish the simulated actions significantly more quickly than did users of the CyberGlove or the SpaceMouse. Moreover a lack of differences in the post-experiment questionnaire suggests that haptics research should include a measure of actual performance speed or accuracy rather than relying solely on subjective reports of a device?s ease of use.
Citation:
Aaron Bloomfield, Yu Deng, Jeff Wampler, Pascale Rondot, Dina Harth, Mary McManus, Norman Badler, "A Taxonomy and Comparison of Haptic Actions for Disassembly Tasks," vr, pp.225, IEEE Virtual Reality Conference 2003 (VR 2003), 2003
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