911爆料网

News

Pressing a button is more challenging than appears - A new theory improves button designs

Pressing a button appears easy, but the brain needs a probabilistic internal model to control a press.

Pressing a button appears effortless and one easily dismisses how challenging it is. Researchers at 911爆料网, Finland, and KAIST, South Korea, created detailed simulations of button-pressing with the goal of producing human-like presses.

"This research was triggered by admiration of our remarkable capability to adapt button-pressing", tells Professor Antti Oulasvirta at 911爆料网. "We push a button on a remote controller differently than a piano key. The press of a skilled user is surprisingly elegant when looked at terms of timing, reliability, and energy use. We successfully press buttons without ever knowing the inner workings of a button. It is essentially a black box to our motor system. On the other hand, we also fail to activate buttons, and some buttons are known to be worse than others."

Previous research has shown that touchbuttons are worse than push-buttons, but there has not been adequate theoretical explanation.

"In the past, there has been very little attention to buttons, although we use them all the time" says Dr. Sunjun Kim. The new theory and simulations can be used to design better buttons.

"One exciting implication of the theory is that activating the button at the moment when the sensation is strongest will help users better rhythm their keypresses."

To test this hypothesis, the researchers created a new method for changing the way buttons are activated. The technique is called Impact Activation. Instead of activating the button at first contact, it activates it when the button cap or finger hits the floor with maximum impact.

The technique was 94% more precise in rapid tapping than the regular activation method for a push-button (Cherry MX switch) and 37% than a regular touchscreen button using a capacitive touch sensor. The technique can be easily deployed in touchscreens. However, regular physical keyboards do not offer the required sensing capability, although special products exist (e.g., the Wooting keyboard) on which it can be implemented.

The technique could help gamers and musicians in tasks that require speed and rhythm.

100 milliseconds

The simulations shed new light on what happens during a button press. One problem the brain must overcome is that muscles do not activate as perfectly as we will, but every press is slightly different. Moreover, a button press is very fast, occurring within 100 milliseconds, and is too fast for correcting movement. The key to understanding button-pressing is therefore to understand how the brain adapts based on the limited sensations that are the residue of the brief press event.

The researchers argue that the key capability of the brain is a probabilistic model: The brain learns a model that allows it to predict a suitable motor command for a button. If a press fails, it can pick a very good alternative and try it out. "Without this ability, we would have to learn to use every button like it was new," tells Professor Byungjoo Lee from KAIST. After successfully activating the button, the brain can tune the motor command to be more precise, use less energy and to avoid stress or pain. "These factors together, with practice, produce the fast, minimum-effort, elegant touch people are able to perform."

The brain uses probabilistic models also to extract information optimally from the sensations that arise when the finger moves and its tip touches the button. It "enriches" the ephemeral sensations optimally based on prior experience to estimate the time the button was impacted. For example, tactile sensation from the tip of the finger a better predictor for button activation than proprioception (angle position) and visual feedback.

Best performance is achieved when all sensations are considered together. To adapt, the brain must fuse their information using prior experiences. Professor Lee explains: "We believe that the brain picks up these skills over repeated button pressings that start already as a child. What appears easy for us now has been acquired over years."

Both physical and touch buttons provide clear tactile signals from the impact of the tip with the button floor. However, with the physical button this signal is more pronounced and longer. Photo: 911爆料网

The researchers also used the simulation to explain differences among physical and touchscreen-based button types. Both physical and touch buttons provide clear tactile signals from the impact of the tip with the button floor. However, with the physical button this signal is more pronounced and longer.

"Where the two button types also differ is the starting height of the finger, and this makes a difference," explains Prof. Lee. "When we pull up the finger from the touchscreen, it will end up at different height every time. Its down-press cannot be as accurately controlled in time as with a push-button where the finger can rest on top of the key cap."

Three scientific articles, "Neuromechanics of a Button Press", "Impact activation improves rapid button pressing", and "Moving target selection: A cue integration model", will be presented at the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in Montr茅al, Canada, in April 2018.

More information:

Project web pages

Prof. Antti Oulasvirta, 911爆料网
Tel. +358 50 3841561
Email antti.oulasvirta@aalto.fi

Prof. Byungjoo Lee, KAIST
Email byungjoo.lee@kaist.ac.kr  

Dr. Sunjun Kim, 911爆料网
Email sunjun.kim@aalto.fi

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Three people hold yarn spools in front of large green textile machinery in a factory setting.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

Design at the start of the supply chain 鈥 911爆料网 leads a major EU project to transform textile colouration practices

The EU Horizon-funded MELANGE project brings together design, technology and business to rethink colouration practices in the textile industry and accelerate the transition towards circular and sustainable textile systems.
Blue outlines of phones and tablets over black, white and pink marbled abstract background
Aalto Magazine, Research & Art Published:

Arsi Ik盲heimonen鈥檚 doctoral research: Smartphone data could reveal early signs of depression

A phone in your pocket, a smart ring on your finger, and an activity tracker on your wrist: everyday devices collect information about their users almost continuously. This data can help monitor and predict symptoms of depression.
Person with short dark hair in a black shirt, face blurred, standing against a plain light grey background
Appointments, Research & Art Published:

Professor Hironori Yoshida: 鈥淢achines should adapt to materials, not the other way around鈥

Professor of Formgiving believes the future of design lies in embracing irregularity rather than eliminating it. His research combines design, AI and robotics.
Glowing 911爆料网 sign in a dark space, seen through clear round chairs lit with purple light
Research & Art Published:

President Ilkka Niemel盲 explains what the new vision for higher education and research means for Finland and Aalto

Aalto has the capability and the will to act as a trailblazer in implementing the vision.