Historicalarchived
The Haptic Glove
SPAWAR SYSTEMS CENTER, PACIFIC
Background The number of communication methods has grown significantly over the past two decades: email, instant messaging, text messaging, voice over internet, video conferencing, etc. By utilizing advancements in sensors and software, technologies are being developed to enable more complex messages to be communicated through haptics, which uses the sense of touch. It is one of the oldest forms of communication. Haptic communication overcomes communication barriers for blind and deaf people or where dangerous, dark, or noisy environments prevent the effective use of auditory or visual communication methods The Technology SSC Pacific has developed a glove that can send and receive messages simply by moving fingers. Each finger is fitted with a sensor to measure movement, called an accelerometer, and a vibration motor which creates “sense of touch” feedback. Movements are translated into language and sent over a wireless network from one glove to another glove in the form of vibrations that the receiving party feels. For example, if one user were to hold up the universal peace sign, the other user may feel the Braille writing for the word “peace” on his or her fingertips, and a computer monitor would display the word “peace.” In addition to person-to-person communication, this glove can be used to interact with computers, the World Wide Web, and even autonomous robotic vehicles. Entire books could be communicated electronically to the blind using the glove. Key Benefits Silent communication capability for dangerous, dark or noisy environments Precise control and interaction with computers, internet and autonomous vehicles Invaluable in situations where gloves restrict precise interaction with environment: firefighters, divers, astronauts and the warfighter Provides a method for blind people to communicate with deaf people Provides the ability to communicate through language barriers
Provenance
- Original
- https://dodtechmatch.com/dod/techad/view.aspx?id=10093
- Archived copy
- Wayback Machine snapshot
This record was recovered from a public web archive of dodtechmatch.com and is preserved for historical reference. It may be outdated. Not affiliated with the U.S. Department of Defense. Contact details from the original listing have been withheld.