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Scientists
'touch' via Internet
Technology could allow people to feel others over Web
Tuesday, October 29, 2002 Posted: 2:31 PM EST
LONDON (Reuters) -- Scientists in Britain and the United States shook hands
on Tuesday.
No big deal, one might think, but the men in question were 3,000 miles apart,
connected only by the Internet.
In a technological first, two scientists -- one in London and one in Boston
-- picked up a computer-generated cube between them and moved it, each responding
to the force the other exerted on it.
The devices allowing them to do it are called phantoms, which re-create the
sense of touch by sending small impulses at very high frequencies via the
Internet, using newly developed fibre optic cables and high bandwidths.
"The experiment went very well," said Joel Jordan, part of a team
of scientists at University College London (UCL) which has teamed up with
colleague at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to conduct the experiment.
"You can actually feel the object being pushed against your hand,"
he told Reuters. "We can feel each others' forces."
They plan to conduct a second experiment across an even greater distance --
London to California -- later on Tuesday.
UCL said the secret behind the technology is the speed at which the successive
impulses are sent.
"In much the same way that the brain re-interprets still images into
moving pictures, the frequencies received by the phantom are similarly integrated
to produce the sense of a continuous sensation," a UCL statement said.
Not only can scientists feel the force being exerted by colleagues across
the Atlantic Ocean, they can also feel the texture of the object they are
feeling.
"You can feel how rough something is, or how springy the side of the
cube is," Jordan said.
The implications of the experiment could be vast, said UCL, which described
the event as the world's "first transatlantic handshake over the Internet."
For example, trainee surgeons could use it to practice operations via the
Internet.
Recreational uses seen
It would also have recreational uses, allowing people to touch and feel each
other over the Internet.
"There are certainly strange aspects to this," Jordan said. "You
can hit each other hard enough to leave little bruises, and there are bigger
versions of the equipment we're using which could really cause some damage."
However, don't expect to find touchy-feely computer software in the shops
before Christmas. "I don't think it'll be available to the public for
years -- at least five years," Jordan said.
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