This work discusses basic human senses: sight; sound; touch; taste; and smell; and the way in which it may be possible to compensate for lack of one, or more, of these by explicitly representing stimuli using the remaining senses. There may be many situations or scenarios where not all five of these base senses are being stimulated, either because of an optional restriction or deficit or because of a physical or sensory impairment such as loss of sight or touch sensation. Related to this there are other scenarios where sensory matching problems may occur. For example: a user immersed in a virtual environment may have a sense of smell from the real world that is unconnected to the virtual world. In particular, this paper is concerned with ho...
Many people are understandably excited by the suggestion that the chemical senses can be digitized; ...
The matching of scents with music is both one of the most natural (or intuitive) of crossmodal corre...
Perception in the real world is inherently multisensory, often involving visual, auditory, tactile, ...
This work discusses basic human senses: sight; sound; touch; taste; and smell; and the way in which ...
This work discusses basic human senses: sight; sound; touch; taste; and smell; and the way in which ...
This paper explores a compositional method based on the interpretation of information received throu...
Modern aesthetics regards sight and hearing as the only senses which were able to produce art. Touch...
The senses we call upon when interacting with technology are very restricted. We mostly rely on visi...
The senses, or sensory modalities, constitute the different ways we have of perceiving the world, su...
Given the sensory poverty of virtual environments, such as those found in computer games that rely, ...
Each of our senses is 'blind' to some features of objects and events (e.g., hearing can tell us litt...
This paper follows up on my continuing research on a compositional method based on the interpretatio...
Grounded theories hold sensorimotor activation is critical to language processing. Such theories hav...
Olfaction and gustation are important survival mechanisms. These sensory modalities also have an imp...
Olfaction is ingrained into the fabric of our daily lives and constitutes an integral part of our pe...
Many people are understandably excited by the suggestion that the chemical senses can be digitized; ...
The matching of scents with music is both one of the most natural (or intuitive) of crossmodal corre...
Perception in the real world is inherently multisensory, often involving visual, auditory, tactile, ...
This work discusses basic human senses: sight; sound; touch; taste; and smell; and the way in which ...
This work discusses basic human senses: sight; sound; touch; taste; and smell; and the way in which ...
This paper explores a compositional method based on the interpretation of information received throu...
Modern aesthetics regards sight and hearing as the only senses which were able to produce art. Touch...
The senses we call upon when interacting with technology are very restricted. We mostly rely on visi...
The senses, or sensory modalities, constitute the different ways we have of perceiving the world, su...
Given the sensory poverty of virtual environments, such as those found in computer games that rely, ...
Each of our senses is 'blind' to some features of objects and events (e.g., hearing can tell us litt...
This paper follows up on my continuing research on a compositional method based on the interpretatio...
Grounded theories hold sensorimotor activation is critical to language processing. Such theories hav...
Olfaction and gustation are important survival mechanisms. These sensory modalities also have an imp...
Olfaction is ingrained into the fabric of our daily lives and constitutes an integral part of our pe...
Many people are understandably excited by the suggestion that the chemical senses can be digitized; ...
The matching of scents with music is both one of the most natural (or intuitive) of crossmodal corre...
Perception in the real world is inherently multisensory, often involving visual, auditory, tactile, ...