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Assessment of Spatial Lingual Tactile Sensitivity using a Gratings Orientation Test
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Touch influences perceived gloss.

Wendy J Adams1, Iona S Kerrigan1, Erich W Graf1

  • 1Psychology, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, ENGLAND.

Scientific Reports
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Touch significantly influences how shiny objects appear. Slippery textures make objects seem glossier, demonstrating how our senses integrate touch and vision for material perception.

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Perception

Background:

  • Object recognition and action planning rely on perceiving material properties like weight, hardness, and slipperiness.
  • Visual cues, such as gloss, are important for material perception, but their interaction with haptic (touch) information is not well understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how haptic information, specifically friction, modulates the perception of visual gloss.
  • To determine if the sensory system integrates visual gloss and haptic friction cues.

Main Methods:

  • Participants explored virtual objects with varying visual gloss and haptic friction.
  • A discrimination paradigm assessed the ability to detect changes in glossiness when paired with congruent or incongruent friction changes.
  • Subjective ratings were collected to evaluate perceived glossiness based on tactile feedback.

Main Results:

  • Haptic friction significantly modulated gloss perception; objects that felt slippery were perceived as glossier.
  • Visual and haptic cues were integrated, with congruent changes (e.g., increased gloss with decreased friction) being more easily detected.
  • Incongruent changes (e.g., increased gloss with decreased slipperiness) resulted in smaller perceptual shifts, indicating cue interaction.

Conclusions:

  • The sensory system treats visual gloss and haptic friction as correlated cues for surface material properties.
  • The visual system utilizes a probabilistic relationship between friction and gloss to bias perception, compensating for visual ambiguity.