Abstract
The present study examined whether the locations of patterns on the skin affected the ability to process information about their shapes. In Experiment 1, pairs of spatial vibrotactile patterns, using the array from the Optacon, were presented sequentially to subjects' left index fingerpads. The location of each pattern in a pair was varied randomly among four locations on the skin. The subjects responded "same" or "different" on the basis of the shapes of patterns, regardless of their locations. Discrimination accuracy was highest and response time fastest when patterns occupied identical locations (ILs), and performance suffered with increasing distance between patterns. In Experiment 2, pairs were presented to corresponding points or to noncorresponding points on separate fingerpads. When patterns occupied corresponding points on separate fingers, accuracy was lower than when patterns occupied ILs on a single finger, but higher than when patterns occupied noncorresponding points on separate fingers. The results suggested that discriminability declined partly because patterns did not occupy ILs, and partly because separate locations had different densities of innervation. © 1995 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Horner, D. T. (1995). The effect of location on the discrimination of spatial vibrotactile patterns. Perception & Psychophysics, 57(4), 463–474. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03213072
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