Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Tactile and Chemical Senses01:27

Tactile and Chemical Senses

719
Tactile senses encompass touch, temperature, and pain, each mediated by specific receptors. Touch receptors detect mechanical energy or pressure against the skin. Sensory fibers from these receptors enter the spinal cord and relay information to the brain stem. Here, most fibers cross over to the opposite side of the brain. The touch information then moves to the thalamus, which projects a map of the body's surface onto the somatosensory areas of the parietal lobes in the cerebral cortex.
719
Somatosensation01:33

Somatosensation

43.0K
The somatosensory system relays sensory information from the skin, mucous membranes, limbs, and joints. Somatosensation is more familiarly known as the sense of touch. A typical somatosensory pathway includes three types of long neurons: primary, secondary, and tertiary. Primary neurons have cell bodies located near the spinal cord in groups of neurons called dorsal root ganglia. The sensory neurons of ganglia innervate designated areas of skin called dermatomes.
43.0K
Vibrating Concrete01:19

Vibrating Concrete

366
Mechanical vibrators are instrumental in compacting newly poured concrete within formwork and around reinforcements. This process is essential to eliminate trapped air pockets and establish a dense concrete mass. One widely used method is vibrating by internal vibrators, often referred to as a poker vibrator or immersion vibrator. It is rapidly inserted through the full depth of the freshly laid concrete and slightly extends into the layer below it (which remains in a plastic state). Consistent...
366
Design Example: Resistive Touchscreen01:14

Design Example: Resistive Touchscreen

698
A device engineer plays a crucial role in designing user interfaces for mobile devices. One such interface is the resistive touchscreen, which fundamentally consists of two metallic layers: a flexible upper layer and a rigid lower layer, separated by a narrow gap. The high resistance between these two layers is a key characteristic of this design.
When a user touches the screen, the two layers make contact at a specific point known as the touchpoint. This contact reduces the resistance between...
698
Perception of Sound Waves01:01

Perception of Sound Waves

5.4K
The human ear is not equally sensitive to all frequencies in the audible range. It may perceive sound waves with the same pressure but different frequencies as having different loudness. Moreover, the perception of sound waves depends on the health of an individual's ears, which decays with age. The health of one's ears may also be affected by regular exposure to loud noises.
The pitch of a sound depends on the frequency and the pressure amplitude of the source. Two sounds of the same...
5.4K
Sensory Modalities01:15

Sensory Modalities

3.7K
Sensation typically is the process by which the sensory receptors and sense organs detect stimuli from the internal and external environment and transmit this information to the central nervous system for processing.
General senses refer to the broad category of sensory information detected by receptors in the body and can be further grouped into somatic and visceral senses. Somatic sensations include touch, pressure, temperature, and pain and are essential for navigating our environment and...
3.7K

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Publisher Correction: Response dynamics of rat barrel cortex neurons to repeated sensory stimulation.

Scientific reports·2019
Same author

Response dynamics of rat barrel cortex neurons to repeated sensory stimulation.

Scientific reports·2017
Same journal

RETRACTED: Zhang et al. A Novel Framework for Reconstruction and Imaging of Target Scattering Centers via Wide-Angle Incidence in Radar Networks. <i>Sensors</i> 2025, <i>25</i>, 6802.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)·2026
Same journal

Enhancing Unsupervised Multi-Source Domain Adaptation for Person Re-Identification via Mixture of Experts and Graph-Based Relation.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)·2026
Same journal

Development of an Instrumented Glove for Palmar Pressure Assessment in Kayakers.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)·2026
Same journal

Development and Experimental Validation of an Autonomous IoT-Based Monitoring System for Real-Time Water Quality Assessment in the Amazon River.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)·2026
Same journal

Semi-Supervised Adversarial Learning Framework for Controller Area Network Bus Intrusion Detection.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)·2026
Same journal

Smart Optimization Method for Safety Signs in Innovative Manufacturing Environments Integrating Industrial Field IoT Sensors and Knowledge Graphs.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jan 16, 2026

Applying Incongruent Visual-Tactile Stimuli during Object Transfer with Vibro-Tactile Feedback
05:43

Applying Incongruent Visual-Tactile Stimuli during Object Transfer with Vibro-Tactile Feedback

Published on: May 23, 2019

5.8K

Continuous Vibration-Driven Virtual Tactile Motion Perception Across Fingertips.

Mehdi Adibi1,2

  • 1Turner Institute of Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3800, Australia.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
|September 27, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The human tactile system can perceive motion direction using continuous vibrations with phase differences, even without spatial movement. This finding opens possibilities for new haptic device designs.

Keywords:
hapticmotionpsychophysicssomatosensorytactilevibrationvibrotactile

More Related Videos

Testing Tactile Masking between the Forearms
08:05

Testing Tactile Masking between the Forearms

Published on: February 10, 2016

6.8K
Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects
07:32

Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects

Published on: September 1, 2016

13.1K

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jan 16, 2026

Applying Incongruent Visual-Tactile Stimuli during Object Transfer with Vibro-Tactile Feedback
05:43

Applying Incongruent Visual-Tactile Stimuli during Object Transfer with Vibro-Tactile Feedback

Published on: May 23, 2019

5.8K
Testing Tactile Masking between the Forearms
08:05

Testing Tactile Masking between the Forearms

Published on: February 10, 2016

6.8K
Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects
07:32

Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects

Published on: September 1, 2016

13.1K

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Haptics
  • Sensory Perception

Background:

  • Tactile motion perception is crucial for interacting with objects.
  • Existing research often uses discrete stimuli, unlike natural continuous signals.
  • The role of phase differences in continuous tactile signals is under-explored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if phase differences in continuous vibrations can create a sense of motion.
  • To explore the mechanisms underlying tactile motion perception from phase-coded signals.
  • To assess the potential for phase-coded stimulation in haptic technology.

Main Methods:

  • Participants experienced continuous amplitude-modulated vibrations with varying phase lags.
  • Motion direction perception and confidence were recorded.
  • Computational models were proposed and evaluated against psychometric data.

Main Results:

  • Reliable motion direction perception was achieved up to 1 Hz modulation frequency.
  • Discrimination performance correlated with phase lag, with anti-phase conditions showing ambiguity.
  • A probabilistic model accurately predicted observed psychometric function shapes and asymmetries.

Conclusions:

  • The tactile system extracts directional information from distributed phase-coded signals without spatial displacement.
  • This mechanism is analogous to arthropod systems but may have unique human constraints.
  • Sparse, phase-coded stimulation is a viable method for conveying motion cues in haptic devices.