Feedback Form
   
Add to Google
Magnets Power Haptic Computer Interface Magnets Power Haptic Computer Interface
Monday, March 31, 2008 - Doron Tilleman
Home >> News >> Computer Technology
  Peralink
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have developed a new haptic interface which provides computer users an accurate artificial sense of touch. The device, which resembles a bowl with a peg standing in the middle, uses magnets and has a single moving part. Originally built in 1997, it was recently perfected to a degree which enables a precise sensory feedback in six degrees of freedom, better than most existing interfaces. Using grant money, 10 copies of the device were built, 6 of which will be distributed to other haptic research centers in the U.S. and Canada.

Two Haptic interfaces being used at the same time (Credit: Carnegie Mellon University) 
Two Haptic interfaces being
used at the same time
(Credit: Carnegie Mellon University)
A Haptic interface simulates the feeling we get when touching and manipulating objects in the real world through a mediator, like a glove or a control handle. It can mimic the surface texture of glass or the weight of a chair we are trying to move. 

While most people are familiar with this field of research from force feedback joysticks, steering wheels, and gamepads, which all simulate the control of jet fighters and cars in computer games, haptic interfaces are also used in the fields of tele-medicine. In these fields, haptic interfaces allow doctors to conduct medical exams and surgical procedures from a distance, and even to simulate the feeling of touching fabrics remotely

While most haptic interfaces use motors and mechanical linkages to recreate the tactile input, a new device, developed by Professor Ralph Hollis, Research Professor in Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute, uses a single moving part. "We believe this device provides the most realistic sense of touch of any haptic interface in the world today," said Hollis. 

At the heart of the Maglev (Magnetic levitation) interface is a bowl-shaped device called a flotor, which houses six coils of wires. Electric current flowing through the coils interacts with the powerful permanent magnets underneath, causing the flotor and the control handle attached to it to levitate and exert force feedback. To the user, this force feedback feels like the resistance of weight or a surface’s resistance or friction, depending on the object being simulated. Optical sensors measures the position and orientation of the flotor while the user manipulated it in six degrees of freedom - up/down, side to side, back/forth, yaw, pitch and roll.  

 Haptic interface diagram (Credit: Carnegie Mellon University)
Haptic interface diagram
(Credit: Carnegie Mellon University)
In terms of precision, the device can track even the smallest movements of the handle- as small as two microns, 1/50 the width of a strand of human hair. It can resist a force of up to 40 Newtons before it shifts. However, the device does suffer from limited range, as the handle can only move 12 inches in any direction and tilts up to 14 degrees, making the experience similar to writing with a pen. 

Hollis's research group first built the device back in 1997, but now, with the aid of a $300,000 National Science Foundation grant, they have improved the ergonomics and performance of the device and lowered its cost. The grant money also enabled them to build 10 copies of the device, 6 of which will be shipped to researchers in the U.S. and Canada. The researchers receiving copies of the device are members of the Magnetic Levitation Haptic Consortium, an international group dedicated to fostering increased use of this technology. 

According to Professor Hollis, the full potential of haptic interfaces, and particularly of magnetic levitation haptic interfaces, has yet to be explored. "Putting the instrument in the hands of other researchers is critical in a young, developing field such as haptic technology", he emphasized. 

Hong Tan, Associate Professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue University and a consortium member, studies human perception of fine surface textures that requires simulation resolution at the micron level. “This is beyond the capability of most commercially available haptic devices, but the maglev device developed by Dr. Hollis will make it possible for us to continue this research,” she said. 

A company called Butterfly Haptics, which was founded by Hollis, expects to receive orders for the device already in June or July 2008. 

The new haptic interface  was demonstrated at the IEEE 16th Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environments and Teleoperator Systems, which was held on March 13th-14th in Reno, Nevada. 

TFOT has previously written about innovative human computer interfaces like E-lead’s Noahpad UMPC, a device that has a touchpad which serves also as a keyboard. You can also check out our article on the “combimouse” - a combination keyboard and mouse, and our report in HoloTouch's floating holographic keyboard

For more information, see the Carnegie Mellon University press release or watch a short video demonstrating the use of the haptic interface.

Related News Improving Optical Fiber Accuracy Improving Optical Fiber Accuracy Graphene Semiconductors Graphene Semiconductors

Related Pictures Microsoft's RoundTable Microsoft's RoundTable Qosmio Quad Core HD Processor Qosmio Quad Core HD Processor

Other Articles Shedding Light on Blindness Shedding Light on Blindness Mind Controlled Bionic Limbs Mind Controlled Bionic Limbs



No comments have been posted for this item.

Add a New Comment
Your name:   0/20
Subject:  0/30
Your Comment:  0/999
Type the following letters: Visual CAPTCHA
Please keep your comments related to the above item's topic. TFOT reserves the right to delete any unrelated comment without notice.

Picture Of The Day
Micro-Flying Robot
Micro-Flying Robot

Video
Hottest Water on Earth
Hottest Water on Earth

Site Of The Week
Patently Silly
Patently Silly

Personal Column
Jet Engine Development in Germany
Dr. Daniel Uziel
Jet Engine Development in Germany
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise With Us | Site Profile
Copyright © 2007 The Future of Things. All rights reserved.