TY - JOUR
T1 - Biometric-Tuned E-Skin Sensor with Real Fingerprints Provides Insights on Tactile Perception
T2 - Rosa Parks Had Better Surface Vibrational Sensation than Richard Nixon
AU - Hou, Senlin
AU - Huang, Qingyun
AU - Zhang, Hongyu
AU - Chen, Qingjiu
AU - Wu, Cong
AU - Wu, Mengge
AU - Meng, Chen
AU - Yao, Kuanming
AU - Yu, Xinge
AU - Roy, Vellaisamy A.L.
AU - Daoud, Walid
AU - Wang, Jianping
AU - Li, Wen Jung
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2024/9/11
Y1 - 2024/9/11
N2 - The dense mechanoreceptors in human fingertips enable texture discrimination. Recent advances in flexible electronics have created tactile sensors that effectively replicate slowly adapting (SA) and rapidly adapting (RA) mechanoreceptors. However, the influence of dermatoglyphic structures on tactile signal transmission, such as the effect of fingerprint ridge filtering on friction-induced vibration frequencies, remains unexplored. A novel multi-layer flexible sensor with an artificially synthesized skin surface capable of replicating arbitrary fingerprints is developed. This sensor simultaneously detects pressure (SA response) and vibration (RA response), enabling texture recognition. Fingerprint ridge patterns from notable historical figures – Rosa Parks, Richard Nixon, Martin Luther King Jr., and Ronald Reagan – are fabricated on the sensor surface. Vibration frequency responses to assorted fabric textures are measured and compared between fingerprint replicas. Results demonstrate that fingerprint topography substantially impacts skin-surface vibrational transmission. Specifically, Parks' fingerprint structure conveyed higher frequencies more clearly than those of Nixon, King, or Reagan. This work suggests individual fingerprint ridge morphological variation influences tactile perception and can confer adaptive advantages for fine texture discrimination. The flexible bioinspired sensor provides new insights into human vibrotactile processing by modeling fingerprint-filtered mechanical signals at the finger-object interface.
AB - The dense mechanoreceptors in human fingertips enable texture discrimination. Recent advances in flexible electronics have created tactile sensors that effectively replicate slowly adapting (SA) and rapidly adapting (RA) mechanoreceptors. However, the influence of dermatoglyphic structures on tactile signal transmission, such as the effect of fingerprint ridge filtering on friction-induced vibration frequencies, remains unexplored. A novel multi-layer flexible sensor with an artificially synthesized skin surface capable of replicating arbitrary fingerprints is developed. This sensor simultaneously detects pressure (SA response) and vibration (RA response), enabling texture recognition. Fingerprint ridge patterns from notable historical figures – Rosa Parks, Richard Nixon, Martin Luther King Jr., and Ronald Reagan – are fabricated on the sensor surface. Vibration frequency responses to assorted fabric textures are measured and compared between fingerprint replicas. Results demonstrate that fingerprint topography substantially impacts skin-surface vibrational transmission. Specifically, Parks' fingerprint structure conveyed higher frequencies more clearly than those of Nixon, King, or Reagan. This work suggests individual fingerprint ridge morphological variation influences tactile perception and can confer adaptive advantages for fine texture discrimination. The flexible bioinspired sensor provides new insights into human vibrotactile processing by modeling fingerprint-filtered mechanical signals at the finger-object interface.
KW - fingerprint pattern types
KW - graphene oxide
KW - manual fabric texture recognition
KW - mechanoreceptors
KW - tactile sensors
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85198122276&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/advs.202400234
DO - 10.1002/advs.202400234
M3 - Article
C2 - 38988056
AN - SCOPUS:85198122276
VL - 11
JO - Advanced Science
JF - Advanced Science
IS - 34
M1 - 2400234
ER -