This work addresses the challenge of providing effective cutaneous
haptic feedback in robotic teleoperation, with the objective of
achieving the highest degree of transparency whilst guaranteeing the
stability of the considered systems. On the one hand, it evaluates
teleoperation systems that provide only cutaneous cues to the operator,
thus guaranteeing the highest degree of safety. This cutaneous-only
approach shows intermediate performance between no force feedback and
full haptic feedback provided by a grounded haptic interface, and it is
best suitable for those scenarios where the safety of the system is
paramount, e.g., robotic surgery. On the other hand, in order to achieve
a higher level of performance, this work also investigates novel robotic
teleoperation systems with force reflection able to provide mixed
cutaneous and kinesthetic cues to the operator. Cutaneous cues can
compensate for the temporary reduction of kinesthetic feedback necessary
to satisfy certain stability conditions.
This state-of-the-art volume is oriented toward researchers, educators,
and students who are interested in force feedback techniques for robotic
teleoperation, cutaneous device design, cutaneous rendering methods and
perception studies, as well as readers from different disciplines who
are interested in applying cutaneous haptic technologies and methods to
their field of interest.