Reach out and touch someone!
Literally! A whole new way to text message
someone...
Fingertips 'read'
text messages
A way to read
text messages just by touch has been developed by researchers in
Germany.
They created a mobile with tiny arrays
embedded with moving pins that rise and fall under a person's
fingertips.
This allows a
person to perceive a text message as a 'tactile melody', said the scientists
from Bonn University.
They have
shown off a working prototype of the phone at this week's Hanover industrial
trade fair.
Feel your
way
The researchers came up with a
way to direct the movement of the pins to create specific patterns under the
fingers.
While the system can
to recognise circles, lines, squares, or letters such as V, the perception of
more complex symbols is highly
individual.
For instance, the
'@' sign might feel like a spiral, the word 'I' as a wave that flows towards the
person and 'you' as a wave that flows
away.
"Of course, we are not
intending to transmit letters via this tactile channel," said Professor Rolf
Eckmiller, head of the Division of Neural Computation at Bonn
University.
"We are not about
to compete with the eye. What interests us is the rapid transmission of sensory
units, such as I, you, in an hour or to
Bonn.
"So it would be possible,
for instance, given an appropriately equipped mobile, to translate the SMS
sentence, 'I shall be home in an hour' into a corresponding sequence of tactile
melodies," he said.
Future
users of tactile mobiles are not expected to spend ages though, memorising
preset fingertip melodies.
Tactile
words
The group is working on
specially designed software that will enable the device to adapt to its owners
and give them the option of creating their very own touch
vocabulary.
Moving pins that rise and
fall under a person's fingertips

By providing the user with a
selection of tactile terms for each word they wish to use, the software will be
able to create further variations till the word is transformed into satisfactory
pin movements.
The researchers
say that the system can be quickly taught to identify the melody the individual
wants to correlate with an object, word, or event which a person can then
remember just as easily as they would remember pictures and
sounds.
"I can assign a certain
tactile melody to my wife and another tactile melody to my daughter," said Prof
Eckmiller.
"If they send me an
SMS, I immediately recognise these melodies, because I selected and generated
them myself."
Benefits include
being able to read messages with total privacy or under poor lighting
conditions. The team has been working on the technology for four years and has
filed patents a year and a half
ago.
Touch
composing
The scientists expect the
system to pave the way for purely tactile SMS messaging in future generations of
mobiles but the technology has many potential
applications.
For instance,
tactile actuator arrays built into steering wheels or control handles could
provide car drivers or pilots with information as to the right route or warn
them in difficult situations.
Pieces of art could be developed solely to be touched, by 'tactile composers'
akin to music for the ear and paintings for the
eye.
The scientists are also
looking to apply the process in the field of medical engineering, to reproduce
sounds for the deaf, or as a visual aid for the
blind.
"Our major intention
with this invention and development is to open up the sense of touch as a new
channel for human communication," said Prof
Eckmiller.
"The sense of touch
will in the future be added as the third communication channel to human
communication technologies."
Posted: Thu - April 22, 2004 at 07:48 PM