Sensory substitution and non-sensory feelings
Sensory substitution and non-sensory feelings
One limitation of sensory substitution devices (SSDs) is their inability to reproduce the non-sensory feelings that are normally associated with visual experiences, especially hedonic responses. This is sometimes reported to cause SSD users frustration and it is unclear that improvements in acuity, bandwidth, or training will resolve the issue. We offer a novel solution. Researchers can produce hedonic responses by eliciting these feelings artificially, pairing distal objects that should be pleasurable to pleasurable outputs from the SSD. We outline two strategies for accomplishing this: first, by means of a prefixed, hardwired association of distal objects to SSD outputs; and second, by means of a flexible, feedback-based association created by subject-directed matching of distal objects to SSD outputs. We evaluate both strategies, and argue that the feedback-based strategy is more promising. Researchers could use this strategy to help the blind, allowing them to take pleasure in objects they perceive using SSDs.
267-277
Baysan, Umut
69cc8c93-08a0-4b88-8192-eb5a22fa82e3
Suarez, David
a8b405b5-ed78-4eb0-b19a-ca498ca85aec
Acosta-Navas, Diana
e6c2ea72-f387-4cee-84d9-6f9799977681
Connolly, Kevin
4bd4d7b6-cccb-42b8-9e56-6033c89eb46f
December 2018
Baysan, Umut
69cc8c93-08a0-4b88-8192-eb5a22fa82e3
Suarez, David
a8b405b5-ed78-4eb0-b19a-ca498ca85aec
Acosta-Navas, Diana
e6c2ea72-f387-4cee-84d9-6f9799977681
Connolly, Kevin
4bd4d7b6-cccb-42b8-9e56-6033c89eb46f
Baysan, Umut, Suarez, David, Acosta-Navas, Diana and Connolly, Kevin
(2018)
Sensory substitution and non-sensory feelings.
In,
Macpherson, Fiona
(ed.)
Sensory Substitution and Augmentation.
Oxford University Press, .
(doi:10.5871/bacad/9780197266441.003.0016).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
One limitation of sensory substitution devices (SSDs) is their inability to reproduce the non-sensory feelings that are normally associated with visual experiences, especially hedonic responses. This is sometimes reported to cause SSD users frustration and it is unclear that improvements in acuity, bandwidth, or training will resolve the issue. We offer a novel solution. Researchers can produce hedonic responses by eliciting these feelings artificially, pairing distal objects that should be pleasurable to pleasurable outputs from the SSD. We outline two strategies for accomplishing this: first, by means of a prefixed, hardwired association of distal objects to SSD outputs; and second, by means of a flexible, feedback-based association created by subject-directed matching of distal objects to SSD outputs. We evaluate both strategies, and argue that the feedback-based strategy is more promising. Researchers could use this strategy to help the blind, allowing them to take pleasure in objects they perceive using SSDs.
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Published date: December 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 505294
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505294
PURE UUID: aeaa8359-67ab-42a9-857c-2e6045315b81
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Date deposited: 06 Oct 2025 16:45
Last modified: 07 Oct 2025 02:17
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Contributors
Author:
Umut Baysan
Author:
David Suarez
Author:
Diana Acosta-Navas
Author:
Kevin Connolly
Editor:
Fiona Macpherson
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