Beckerle Philipp, Kõiva Risto, Kirchner Elsa Andrea, Bekrater-Bodmann Robin, Dosen Strahinja, Christ Oliver, Abbink David A, Castellini Claudio, Lenggenhager Bigna
Elastic Lightweight Robotics, Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology, Robotics Research Institute, Technische Universität Dortmund, Dortmund, Germany.
Institute for Mechatronic Systems, Mechanical Engineering, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.
Front Neurorobot. 2018 Dec 11;12:84. doi: 10.3389/fnbot.2018.00084. eCollection 2018.
The feeling of embodiment, i.e., experiencing the body as belonging to oneself and being able to integrate objects into one's bodily self-representation, is a key aspect of human self-consciousness and has been shown to importantly shape human cognition. An extension of such feelings toward robots has been argued as being crucial for assistive technologies aiming at restoring, extending, or simulating sensorimotor functions. Empirical and theoretical work illustrates the importance of sensory feedback for the feeling of embodiment and also immersion; we focus on the the perceptual level of touch and the role of tactile feedback in various assistive robotic devices. We critically review how different facets of tactile perception in humans, i.e., affective, social, and self-touch, might influence embodiment. This is particularly important as current assistive robotic devices - such as prostheses, orthoses, exoskeletons, and devices for teleoperation-often limit touch low-density and spatially constrained haptic feedback, i.e., the mere touch sensation linked to an action. Here, we analyze, discuss, and propose how and to what degree tactile feedback might increase the embodiment of certain robotic devices, e.g., prostheses, and the feeling of immersion in human-robot interaction, e.g., in teleoperation. Based on recent findings from cognitive psychology on interactive processes between touch and embodiment, we discuss technical solutions for specific applications, which might be used to enhance embodiment, and facilitate the study of how embodiment might alter human-robot interactions. We postulate that high-density and large surface sensing and stimulation are required to foster embodiment of such assistive devices.
身体归属感,即体验到身体属于自己并能够将物体整合到自身身体表征中的感觉,是人类自我意识的一个关键方面,并且已被证明对人类认知有着重要影响。有人认为,将这种感觉扩展到机器人身上对于旨在恢复、扩展或模拟感觉运动功能的辅助技术至关重要。实证和理论研究表明了感觉反馈对于身体归属感以及沉浸感的重要性;我们关注触觉的感知层面以及触觉反馈在各种辅助机器人设备中的作用。我们批判性地审视人类触觉感知的不同方面,即情感触觉、社交触觉和自我触摸,可能如何影响身体归属感。这一点尤为重要,因为当前的辅助机器人设备,如假肢、矫形器、外骨骼以及远程操作设备,往往限制了触觉反馈的密度较低且在空间上受限,即仅仅是与动作相关的触摸感觉。在此,我们分析、讨论并提出触觉反馈可能如何以及在何种程度上增强某些机器人设备(如假肢)的身体归属感,以及在人机交互(如远程操作)中的沉浸感。基于认知心理学关于触觉与身体归属感之间交互过程的最新研究结果,我们讨论针对特定应用的技术解决方案,这些方案可用于增强身体归属感,并促进对身体归属感如何改变人机交互的研究。我们推测,需要高密度和大面积的传感与刺激来促进此类辅助设备的身体归属感。