With the rapid development of mobile computing, wearable wrist-worn is
becoming more and more popular. But the current vibrotactile feedback patterns
of most wrist-worn devices are too simple to enable effective interaction in
nonvisual scenarios. In this paper, we propose the wristband system with four
vibrating motors placed in different positions in the wristband, providing
multiple vibration patterns to transmit multi-semantic information for users in
eyes-free scenarios. However, we just applied five vibrotactile patterns in
experiments (positional up and down, horizontal diagonal, clockwise circular,
and total vibration) after contrastive analyzing nine patterns in a pilot
experiment. The two experiments with the same 12 participants perform the same
experimental process in lab and outdoors. According to the experimental
results, users can effectively distinguish the five patterns both in lab and
outside, with approximately 90% accuracy (except clockwise circular vibration
of outside experiment), proving these five vibration patterns can be used to
output multi-semantic information. The system can be applied to eyes-free
interaction scenarios for wrist-worn devices.Comment: 10 pages