Can a Smartwatch Move Your Fingers? Compact and Practical Electrical Muscle Stimulation in a Smartwatch

要旨

Smartwatches gained popularity in the mainstream, making them into today’s de-facto wearables. Despite advancements in sensing, haptics on smartwatches is still restricted to tactile feedback (e.g., vibration). Most smartwatch-sized actuators cannot render strong force-feedback. Simultaneously, electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) promises compact force-feedback but, to actuate fingers requires users to wear many electrodes on their forearms. While forearm electrodes provide good accuracy, they detract EMS from being a practical force-feedback interface. To address this, we propose moving the electrodes to the wrist—conveniently packing them in the backside of a smartwatch. In our first study, we found that by cross-sectionally stimulating the wrist in 1,728 trials, we can actuate thumb extension, index extension & flexion, middle flexion, pinky flexion, and wrist flexion. Following, we engineered a compact EMS that integrates directly into a smartwatch’s wristband (with a custom stimulator, electrodes, demultiplexers, and communication). In our second study, we found that participants could calibrate our device by themselves ~50% faster than with conventional EMS. Furthermore, all participants preferred the experience of this device, especially for its social acceptability & practicality. We believe that our approach opens new applications for smartwatch-based interactions, such as haptic assistance during everyday tasks.

受賞
Honorable Mention
著者
Akifumi Takahashi
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Yudai Tanaka
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Archit Tamhane
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Alan Shen
University Of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Shan-Yuan Teng
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Pedro Lopes
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States
論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3654777.3676373

動画

会議: UIST 2024

ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology

セッション: 1. Body as the interface

Westin: Allegheny 1
4 件の発表
2024-10-14 19:40:00
2024-10-14 20:40:00