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Life Sciences 5.9 🇳🇱 🇸🇪

Scientists Create First Standardized Language for Electric Touch Sensations

Researchers have mapped 42 consistent verbal descriptors for electrotactile stimulation—the sensation of electric pulses on skin. The finding establishes a common vocabulary for wearable haptic devices, removing a critical bottleneck for companies developing touch-feedback technology in AR/VR, prosthetics, and remote communication systems.

Originaltitel: Verbal Descriptors for Electrotactile Stimulation

Abstrakt

Electrotactile stimulation can evoke a wide range of sensations, including taps, squeezes, and strokes. Although verbal descriptors are available for vibrotactile and ultrasound stimuli, a comprehensive list has not been developed for electrotactile experiences. To address this, we used a text normalization approach to generate descriptors for wearable electrotactile research and design. In Experiment 1 (N=14), Dutch participants provided 504 open-ended descriptions in response to 36 electrotactile stimuli on the forearm. These were processed into 71 unique English descriptors with considerable inter-rater reliability. Experiment 2 (N=24) evaluated a reduced list of 42 descriptors under additional stimulation conditions, showing robust and consistent descriptor usage, also across varying stimulus intensities. This list partially overlaps with previous non-electrotactile descriptor lists but also includes terms that seem to be unique to electrotactile sensations. Altogether, our findings contribute to the development of common verbal descriptors for electrotactile stimulation, supporting future wearable haptic research and design.

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