Thursday, 7 June 2012

"Feelable" touchscreens revisited


Tactus have gotten quite a lot of attention recently after demonstrating their new touchscreen technology (pictured above; image source). Their "Tactile Layer" technology raises bubbles on the touchscreen, creating, essentially, physical objects on the touchscreen. I suppose I've taken quite an interest in this since it's similar to something I wrote about 6 months ago: feelable touchscreens.

Here are two amazing and innovative technologies, each taking a different approach towards creating tactile sensations from a touchscreen. Senseg use small electric currents to stimulate the skin, creating edges and feelings of texture, while Tactus actually create something physical.

To the best of my understanding, Tactus' technology allows bubbles (I'm reluctant to call them buttons; who knows what else interaction designers could do with this!) in pre-determined locations, configured during manufacture. Different configurations are possible, apparently, but from what I've read it seems that these are decided at manufacture. Whilst this allows some fundamental improvements to the touchscreen experience (e.g. providing a configuration for a keyboard), it lacks some flexibility as manufacture determines where bubbles can be used.

Senseg's tech, however, is more flexible and appears to be truly dynamic; application developers can control the precise location where feelings can be experienced rather than this being decided during manufacture.

Having dabbled with Microsoft Surface over the past year I'm pleased to see that both of these technologies apparently scale well to larger displays. Interactive tabletops suffer from the same loss of tactile feedback that touchscreen mobile devices do although this is perhaps less apparent on a large scale device where widgets aren't crammed into such a small space.

I don't think it's fair to ask which of these technologies is better, because they can't fairly be compared. Although the flexibility of Senseg vs the physical tactility of Tactus is an interesting comparison, I feel that a better question is could these concepts be somehow combined? Imagine a touchscreen which offers complete configuration flexibility, a richer tactile experience like Senseg claim to offer (e.g. feeling texture, not just the presence of something) and the benefits of feeling something physical on the touchscreen. Now that would be awesome.

Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Kinect Disconnect

If Microsoft's announcements at E3 are anything to go by then they obviously see Kinect, their hands-free motion-sensing input, as a centrepiece in the Xbox ecosystem. Kinect is also being used increasingly more outside of gaming. There's plenty of interesting examples of novel interaction design centred around Kinect and it's becoming almost ubiquitous in hands-free interaction research. Still, there's one thing that Kinect lacks: tactile response. I feel that this has more of an impact in games than other uses, so that's what I'll discuss here.

Lack of tactile feedback is obvious; if I'm providing input to a game by waving my hands about, I'm not going to feel anything in response to my actions. Actually, that's not technically true. There's some really cool research happening at the University of Tokyo combining Kinect and ultrasound so that you feel like you're manipulating a mid-air object with your hands but this technology (so far) isn't really suited to games. Limitations with their current technology means that it wouldn't scale to the typical Kinect gaming scenario: a user on the opposite side of the living room from the television, moving around a large space.

To recap: Kinect is pretty cool, but it lacks tactile response. Why does this matter in gaming? Interaction in gaming benefits from a closed feedback loop between player and game. As the player provides some input (e.g. mouse click, button press, gesture), they receive some response from the game. This is a continuous loop where the feedback provided (visual, audible, tactile) communicates what effect that action had and allows the player to adjust their actions if appropriate.

I feel that tactile feedback is an important part of this feedback loop: in action games it can confirm success of an action (e.g. you "feel" a punch connect) or inform you some event (e.g. you "feel" your character take a hit). Tactile feedback can also be rewarding. A well designed game combines the aesthetics of the game, good sound design and the feedback from the controller to make a satisfying experience.

With devices such as Kinect you lose this tactile feedback. Touchscreen devices can also suffer from this problem; tablets often lack the rotational motors that mobile phones have to provide low fidelity feedback. Not only does this remove a way of communicating in-game state, but also removes some all-important precision of control. In some games precision is key. Actually being able to hold and feel an input device allows a similar tactile feedback as discussed previously, except this time it's the physical characteristics of the controller which the player feels. Being able to feel the controller and how it responds permits a greater amount of control and precision. A few months ago I wrote briefly about "feelable" touchscreens which could be one way to enrich the mobile gaming experience for touchscreens, but that's another discussion. Back to Kinect.

Kinect is an amazing piece of technology and it, and similar devices, have a great potential in interaction design. I can't help but feel that its use in gaming, however, suffers from the loss of a modality. It potentially detracts from two key aspects of games: communication of state and input precision. Where am I going with this? I'm not really sure. Should Kinect be written off for games? Absolutely not: it does have its uses in more casual games. But what is the future of Kinect in more "serious" games (a term I detest but can't think of an alternative)? Should we strive to develop haptic technologies which make Kinect viable for these games or just continue to treat it as a bit of a gimmick?