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Over the last few years, a growing number of IT devices have started to incorporate touch-screen technology in order to create more effective multimodal user interfaces. The use of such technology has opened up the possibility of presenting different kinds of tactile feedback (i.e., active vs. passive) to users. Here, we report 2 experiments designed to investigate the spatiotemporal constraints on the multisensory interaction between vision and touch as they relate to a user's active vs. passive interaction with a touch screen device. Our results demonstrate that when touch is active, tactile perception is less influenced by irrelevant visual stimulation than when passively touching the screen. Our results also show that vision has to lead touch by approximately 40ms in order for optimal simultaneity to be perceived, no matter whether touch is active or passive. These findings provide constraints for the future design of enhanced multimodal interfaces. © 2008 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

Original publication

DOI

10.1007/978-3-540-69057-3_104

Type

Conference paper

Publication Date

27/10/2008

Volume

5024 LNCS

Pages

826 - 831