Katherine Kuchenbecker: The technology of touch
Katherine Kuchenbecker works on incorporating the sense of touch directly into virtual objects. Imagine being able to feel textures on your digital screens. Full bio
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the beautiful and interesting things
나눌 수는 없습니다.
is really important.
interaction you do every day,
anything you do in the world.
촉각과 관련되어 있습니다.
is actually pretty interesting.
of your body and how it's moving,
you have with the world
is it a bunny, what is it?
for how good people are with their hands.
make technology better
with the sense of touch.
to computers and machines
더 낫게 만들 수 있을까요?
advantage of your hands?
저는 생각합니다.
of a field called haptics,
touch technology.
that can measure that motion,
sensations over time
in the real world,
실제 세상에서 느끼는 것과 같죠.
you're touching something
착각하게 만들 수 있습니다.
from research in my lab at Penn.
연구한 결과입니다.
problem that I was showing you:
똑같은 문제입니다.
how hard you're pushing;
exactly where you've moved it;
정확하게 알 수 있고
an accelerometer, inside,
back and forth of the tool
that's a piece of canvas
from these interactions.
볼 수 있습니다.
get larger and smaller,
model of those relationships
in the white bracket
back and forth, on the real canvas.
and it's really a lot of fun.
haptic photography.
benefits in all sorts of areas
maybe interactive museum exhibits,
쓸 수 있는 잠재력을 갖고 있습니다.
to touch the precious artifacts,
여러분은 늘 만지고 싶어하죠.
about comes from a collaboration I have
공동연구에서 나왔습니다.
at the Penn Dental School.
dental students
there are cavities.
comes from what they feel
with a dental explorer.
이를 다 살펴봅니다.
they go across.
is really hard, then it's healthy,
is starting to decay.
for a new dental student to make,
a lot of teeth yet.
before they start practicing
on to the dental explorer,
but also a touch track,
that repeating tool.
felt when they did the recording,
kind of suspicious, right?
definitely put a filling in this tooth."
주의를 집중하면
are hard and healthy,
of judgments doctors make every day
we've invented has a lot of potential
많은 잠재력이 있다고 생각합니다.
training, because it's really simple
what people feel through tools.
more interactive and fun
더 현실적으로 만들 수 있습니다.
in the sensations that you feel.
is again about human movement.
어떻게 해야 할까요?
at something like surfing?
maybe getting some input from a coach,
만들 수 있다고 생각합니다.
more efficient and more fun.
if I have six different arm movements
and try out our system.
we show graphics on the screen,
which have motors inside,
your arm is a little too high --
right there on the skin
these movements more quickly
도와주는 것과 같습니다.
이 시스템을 개발했지만
for use in stroke rehabilitation,
of applications,
or all sorts of sports training as well.
about the field of haptics,
좀 더 알게 되었습니다.
더 많이 듣게 되실 텐데요.
about in the coming years.
who work with me in my lab at Penn
for your kind attention.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Katherine Kuchenbecker - Mechanical engineerKatherine Kuchenbecker works on incorporating the sense of touch directly into virtual objects. Imagine being able to feel textures on your digital screens.
Why you should listen
Could technology be more touchy feely? Mechanical engineer Katherine Kuchenbecker answers this question with a resounding ‘yes.’ Kuchenbecker researches the design, control and performance of robotic systems that enable a user to touch virtual objects and distant environments as though they were real and within reach. These interfaces combine electromechanical sensors, actuators and computer control, allowing for technology that can fool the human sense of touch, otherwise known as ‘haptics.’
Imagine a tablet computer that lets you feel fabrics and textures, robotic surgical tools that let doctors use their incredibly well-honed sense of touch, video games that allow you to feel hits and computer programs that teach you the movements of a sport. By researching these areas -- as well as applications in stroke rehabilitation and assistance for the blind -- Kuchenbecker seeks to improve our understanding of touch and uncover new opportunities to use it in interactions between humans, computers and machines.
An assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Kuchenbecker has been named to the Popular Science Brilliant 10. She is also an avid photographer, and played volleyball at Stanford for two seasons.
Katherine Kuchenbecker | Speaker | TED.com