Navigation by the Soles of Your Feet
Vibrating driver's seats and shoe inserts are proving that humans can gather information using unusual parts of the body
Photo: MCS Lab/Panamericana University
Good Vibrations:
Actuator-embedded insoles gave wearers directions
BY Anne-Marie Corley // October 2009
The point of these new tactile devices is to develop touch-sensitive applications for virtual reality, gaming, robotics, rehabilitation, navigation, and assistance for the blind or visually impaired, among others things.
The shoe dropped at the recent IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems. Ramiro Velazquez, an assistant professor in the Mechatronics and Control Systems Lab at Mexico's Panamerican University, presented his computer-sole interface, which will be worn inside a shoe in its final version. It's the first device to stimulate the bottom of the feet to convey information, rather than to enhance sensation. The goal of his study, Velazquez says, was to answer the question, "Are we capable of understanding information through our feet?"
The answer, it turns out, is yes.
His group chose to stimulate an area of the foot that has a high concentration of receptors for texture and vibration sensing—around where the arch and the ball of the foot meet, along the outer edge of the sole. The researchers arrayed four rows of four miniature vibrating motors of the type used in cellphones, available commercially for US $10, in the shoe insert. Each of these 16 actuators could be activated independently and at different vibrating frequencies to transmit signals, meant to communicate directions and patterns, to 20 research subjects in their study.
First, the researchers tested whether people could understand "dynamic directions," or signals moving in certain directions on the bottom of the feet, while the subjects simply sat still. The researchers matched cardinal directions to patterns on the shoe insert by vibrating rows and columns of the actuators one after another. They vibrated heel row to toe row, for example, to indicate north, or forward, and reversed the direction from toe row to heel row to indicate south, or backward.
The researchers also tested the subjects' ability to perceive geometric shapes made by the vibrating actuators; patterns of vibration, like the alerts for calls or text messages on cellphones; and navigation cues using the dynamic directions as before but this time while the subjects were walking blindfolded around obstacles in a room. They found that people were best at sensing directions and recognizing patterns. In the navigation test, completed by five of the original 20 subjects, four tested well. One got pretty turned around, though even he eventually made it through the obstacle course.
Certain information is just not easily discernible when transmitted via foot communication, Velazquez found. The test subjects had difficulty determining geometric shapes, such as a line, a circle, or a square. Velazquez explains that because vibrations expand throughout the skin, very specific geometric information—such as a diagonal line—is difficult to distinguish.
Still, humans can glean a lot from the soles of their feet. Now that his group has seen what's possible, Velazquez hopes they can create "a new tactile language for the feet" that you'd learn just like any other language.
Feel the Noise: Blindfolded
subjects were steered around a room using vibrational cues on their feet
The car is a good example of a potentially overloaded
sensory environment. Driver-assistance, crash-avoidance, communication, and
entertainment systems all contribute to a crowd of audio and visual information
knocking about in the vehicle. But what if we could take advantage of the
underworked tactile sense?That's a theory that researchers at General Motors and the Dutch research organization TNO took for a test-drive last year. Using a cushion that gives you directions straight through the seat of your pants, the researchers set out to discover if drivers could actually feel direction signals—not just in the lab but also in the harsh reality of driving on real roads, according to TNO researcher Jeroen Hogema. Would vibration signals be masked by rough roads? Would drivers fail to notice the signals if they were concentrating on the actual task of driving?
The researchers tested eight subjects on the device, which was "neatly designed into the upholstery," Hogema says, so it looked "like a normal seat of a car." The seat-cushion device had 64 motors, also of the "silent alarm" cellphone variety, and any of them could be actuated separately, although the researchers clustered groups of actuators to code for eight different directions: front, front left, front right, right, left, back, back left, and back right. They used a single type of test signal: three short, vibrating bursts. Subjects reported the signal as soon as they felt it and the direction as soon as they sensed it.
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Like the sole-stimulating shoe, the vibrating seat cushion did its job. Researchers found that 93.3 percent of the responses were correct, while 6.4 percent were off by one direction segment and just 0.3 percent were off by two segments. In other words, Hogema explains, no one confused left with right or back with front. Rather, the mistakes were more subtle. There were "no situations where the chair gave a direction and the person didn't get the message at all," he says.
In addition to providing direction or navigation information, a rear-end-stimulating seat cushion could be used to avoid getting rear-ended. Seat-cushion direction cues might be an ideal output system for collision-avoidance radar. Although the researchers didn't test the car seat with that possibility in mind, they did show its potential by surprising their subjects with yet another message from the chair after the drivers thought the test was over. Every subject felt the unexpected signal quickly, and almost all of them picked the correct direction.
"It's encouraging that people can get the message" from such an unusual spot, Hogema says, and that they can "do so rapidly and with very few errors."
The next stage of this project would be to link the direction signals to a certain application, says Hogema. While his group at TNO is no longer involved, GM is still working on the project but is keeping mum on the details. TNO and GM are reporting their initial results in an upcoming issue of IEEE Transactions on Haptics.
Success with both prototypes—the shoe and the seat cushion—indicates that people can indeed use tactile cues to pick up directional information, although we're still a long way from navigating to the grocery store using the electronics on our feet or the cushion under our seat.
Still, even if these vibrators don't yield the right information, Velazquez jokes, they could provide excellent massages.
DEAR STUDENTS,
IEEE BASED EMBEDDED SYSTEM PROJECTS(hardware projects)/FINAL YEAR PROJECTS/MINI PROJECTS/DIPLOMA PROJECTS
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ipt/projects full details....PL VISIT http://www.maastechindia.com (projects list,abstract,video,photo gallery)
IEEE BASED EMBEDDED SYSTEM PROJECTS(hardware projects)/FINAL YEAR PROJECTS/MINI PROJECTS/DIPLOMA PROJECTS
INPLANT TRAINING DETAILS, (ECE/EEE/E&I/CSE/BIOMEDICAL/IT/MECHATRONICS/AYTOMOBILES)&MSC ELECTRONICS..
INDUSTRIAL VISIT,project details/ipt details/project discussion/idea sharing......dont hesitate, pl call me..........,dont hesitate, pl call me..........,
thanks
R.ASHOK KUMAR
MAASTECH
89. RANGARAJAPURAM MAIN ROAD(NEAR SBI BANK)
KODAMBAKKAM
CHENNAI-600024, www.maastechindia.com
PH:044-24844676
R.ASHOK KUMAR-098402 34766
B. MAIL VELAN-098841 01622
ipt/projects full details....PL VISIT http://www.maastechindia.com (projects list,abstract,video,photo gallery)
|
TRAIN SAFETY SYSTEMS FOR PASSENGERS-Railway Track Pedestrain Crossing without using Staircase
Railway Track Pedestrain Crossing without using Staircase
ABSTRACT:
In Railway stations normally we
use bridges to go to the other platforms.
Sometimes it is very difficult for the elderly persons or handicapped
persons to use that bridge. Our project
finds a solution to this problem.
Proposed Idea:
This project is used for automatically close/open the mobile platforms
inbetween the train tracks. Normally the mobile platform connects the two
platforms, through which the passengers can walk on the platform to reach the
next platform. when the train comes.
Sensors are placed in the two sides of the track. If the train reaches one
sensor, the mobile platform will automatically close and allows the train to go
through the tracks and then when the train leaves the second sensor the mobile
platform will automatically open bridging the 2 platforms. The Microcontroller will sense the presence
of trains by using Infrared red sensors.
So on sensing the train on one path, the controller will give pulses to
the stepper motor to close the mobile platform automatically.
RAILWAY PEDESTRAIN-PIC16F877 EMBEDDED SYSTEM PROJECTS |
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The mobile platform has a
red/green Signal indication so that the pedestrians can know whether they can
use the bridge or not. The signal automatically turns to red when the train
comes and becomes green when the train leaves the station.
For demonstration we can have a model
decipting this action. The Controller
which we are going to use is PIC 16f877.
BLOCK DIAGRAM
Hardware
1. Infrared Sensors
2. Stepper motors
3. Interfacing unit
4. PIC 16F877
Microcontroller
5. Stepper motor Driver
unit
6. Power Supply unit
Software
1. MPLAB IDE
2. Hitech C Cross compiler
IEEE BASED ELECTRICAL PROJECTS 2013-SCADA FOR ELECTRICAL SUBSTATION MONITORING&CONTROLLING TO PC
SCADA for Power
Station -Substation Monitoring and Automation
This project
designed using the Embedded system aids in the measurement of Various Power
station Parameters and provides a serial interface to the PC.
The SCADA (Supervisory Control And Data
Acquisition System) is achieved by transferring the parameters to a remote
terminal and getting the feed back from the remote computer and abide by the
same.
This Project
also supports Automatic Prediction and Self Protection.
For Example, if a Transformer gets Over
Heated, then automatically the Loads will get Tripped Off.
The transfer
rate of this system is 9600 Baud rate.
This enables us to view and track the online changes encountered in the
Particular parameter or of all the parameters.
One of the main advantage of this project is, it allows us to view all
the parameter readings simultaneously on the screen. The Graph drawn on the screen keeps on
tracking the changes on the parameter.
It also supports Background Processing of the Parameters. The parameters are classified into Analog and
Logic Parameters
Analog Parameters:
1.
Incoming
Voltage
2.
Bus
Voltage
3.
3 -
Feeder Current
4.
Max
Bus Current
5.
Incoming
Current
6.
Power
7.
Power
Factor
8.
Frequency
Logic Parameter:
1.
Over
Heat Protection
2.
Flame
Identification
3.
Trespassing
Identification
WAP:
The
Acquired Parameters can be sent to a Mobile phone as a SMS Message.
Software:
Software
Compatibility with ‘C’ and Visual Basic.
MPLAB
–PIC16F877(EMBEDDED SYSTEMS)
OPERATING
SYSTEMS-WINDOWS XP
DEAR STUDENTS,
ReplyDeleteIEEE BASED EMBEDDED SYSTEM PROJECTS(hardware projects)/FINAL YEAR PROJECTS/MINI PROJECTS/DIPLOMA PROJECTS
INPLANT TRAINING DETAILS, (ECE/EEE/E&I/CSE/BIOMEDICAL/IT/MECHATRONICS/AYTOMOBILES)&MSC ELECTRONICS..
INDUSTRIAL VISIT,project details/ipt details/project discussion/idea sharing......dont hesitate, pl call
me..........,dont hesitate, pl call me..........,
thanks
R.ASHOK KUMAR
MAASTECH
89. RANGARAJAPURAM MAIN ROAD(NEAR SBI BANK)
KODAMBAKKAM
CHENNAI-600024, www.maastechindia.com
PH:044-24844676
R.ASHOK KUMAR-098402 34766
B. MAIL VELAN-098841 01622