학술논문

Physiological Noise and Its Influence on Vibrotactile Perception Thresholds
Document Type
Article
Source
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health. Vol. 12 Issue 4, p417-419. 3 p.
Subject
hand-arm vibration
objective tests
pacinian corpuscles
tremor
vibration syndrome
Language
英文
ISSN
0355-3140
Abstract
Vibration of physiological origin (physiological noise) was studied when a small diameter probe, attached to a vibrator and accelerometer for the determination of vibrotactile perception thresholds, was held in contact with a fingertip. The acceleration spectrum consisted of a broad plateau between 0.1 and 10Hz, where the power spectral density was about -20 dB re I (m/s^2)^2/Hz, and it fell rapidly with increasing frequency above 10 Hz. Substantial contributions from respiration (0.2-1 Hz), blood circulation (1-5 Hz), and hand tremor (6-8 Hz) could be identified. The physiological noise was largely independent of subject, contact force, and probe diameter, and it was approximately equal in amplitude to the threshold of the vibrotactile perception. Current knowledge of the masking and adaptation of vibrotacile signals indicates that vibrotactile thresholds in the frequency range 2-250 Hz may be influenced by the magnitude of this physiological noise under some conditions of flesh stimulation.