Interacting with virtual objects via haptic feedback using the user's hand directly (virtual hand haptic interaction) provides a natural and immersive way to explore the virtual world. It remains a challenging topic to achieve 1 kHz stable virtual hand haptic simulation with no penetration amid hundreds of hand-object contacts. In this paper, we advocate decoupling the high-dimensional optimization problem of computing the graphic-hand configuration, and progressively optimizing the configuration of the graphic palm and fingers, yielding a decoupled-and-progressive optimization framework. We also introduce a method for accurate and efficient hand-object contact simulation, which constructs a virtual hand consisting of a sphere-tree model and five articulated cone frustums, and adopts a configuration-based optimization algorithm to compute the graphic-hand configuration under nonpenetration contact constraints. Experimental results show both high update rate and stability for a variety of manipulation behaviors. Nonpenetration between the graphic hand and complex-shaped objects can be maintained under diverse contact distributions, and even for frequent contact switches. The update rate of the haptic simulation loop exceeds 1 kHz for the whole-hand interaction with about 250 contacts.
CITATION STYLE
Tong, Q., Wang, Q., Zhang, Y., Liao, X., Wei, W., Zhang, Y., … Wang, D. (2022). Configuration-Based Optimization for Virtual Hand Haptic Simulation. IEEE Transactions on Haptics, 15(3), 613–625. https://doi.org/10.1109/TOH.2022.3196625
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