Patent Abstract:
A mouth stabilized electrode array allows spatially encoded data to be tactily impressed upon the tongue providing an alternative to conventional visual pathways with a more compact size, lower power usage, and more convenient apparatus.

Full Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     This application is based on U.S. provisional application No. 60/073,873 filed Feb. 6, 1998 and claims the benefit thereof. This provisional application is hereby incorporated by reference. 
    
    
     STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT 
     This invention was made with United States government support awarded by the following agencies: NIH Grant No: EY10019. The United States has certain rights in this invention. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Tactile vision substitution systems (TVSS) are used to deliver image information to the brain via an array of stimulators in contact with the skin in one of several parts of the body, for example, the abdomen, the back, the thigh or the fingertip. Points of the image are mapped to individual stimulators in the array as either vibrations or direct electrical excitation. With training, perceptual judgments normally used for vision such as depth judgment can be applied to these tactile images. A summary of the art in this field is provided in a paper by the present inventors, hereby incorporated by reference, entitled:  Electrotactile and Vibrotactile Displays for Sensory Substitution Systems,  IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, Volume 38, No. 1, January 1991. 
     The delay in perception for tactile arrays is less than that for vision. For this reason, TVSS systems are not only promising as rehabilitative strategies for sight-impaired individuals but offer an alternative human/machine interface for sighted individuals, especially where rapid reaction times are required. 
     Unfortunately, current TVSS systems have been limited in practical application. Mechanical vibrotacter systems in which the stimulators vibrate are bulky and require considerable energy. Electrotactile systems in which the stimulators produce direct electrical stimulation require relatively high voltage, especially in areas of the fingertips, because there are protective layers of skin between skin surface and the skin&#39;s sensory receptors. TVSS systems which use the fingertips as a reception site, limit the use of the hands for other tasks whereas systems using a site such as the abdomen require larger arrays, are less convenient, and require a conductive gel for proper operation. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention provides an improved human/machine interface (HMI) system using the tongue as a stimulation site. The tongue contains a large number of nerve endings, thus permitting the construction of a small array with a high number of stimulators. Preliminary data by the inventors shows that users tend to adapt or accommodate stimulation current over time when that current is applied to the fingertip requiring the stimulation current or voltage to be increased. In contrast, it presently appears that subjects maintain a constant or even slightly decreasing current level for tongue stimulation. 
     Specifically the present invention provides a tactile stimulation array for the tongue having a mouth part sized to be received and stabilized within the mouth and an array of tactile elements positioned over a lower surface of the mouth part to be in contact with the tongue when the mouth part is received within the mouth. Excitation circuitry communicates with the tactile elements and receives a spatially encoded signal to excite selected ones of the tactile elements according to the spatial encoding. 
     Thus it is one object of the invention to provide an improved human/machine interface for communicating spatially encoded information, such as but not limited to, image information to the tongue as an alternative to optical displays. 
     The tactile elements may be electrodes and the excitation circuitry may connect the electrodes to a source of electrical power to excite selected ones of the tactile elements. 
     Thus it is another object of the invention to make use of the improved electrical sensitivity offered by the tongue both because of the location of the tongue&#39;s sensory receptors close to its surface and the presence of saliva as a conductor. Experimentation by the present inventors has suggested that the tongue requires only about three percent of the voltage and far less current than, for example, the fingertip, to achieve equivalent sensation levels. 
     The spatially encoded signal may include a plurality of data points having defined locations and magnitudes and the excitation circuit may map data points to tactile elements having corresponding locations and excite the tactile elements with an electrical pulse according to a function having the data point magnitude as a range and a value selected from the group of: pulse amplitude, pulse duration, and pulse frequency content. 
     Thus it is another object of the invention to provide a multi-dimensional display where each point of stimulation may have a varied intensity based on a variety of factors. To the extent that the tongue may distinguish simultaneously between these factors, a multidimensional stimulus may be obtained. 
     The mouth part may include an upwardly concave plate supporting on its lower surface the tactile elements and sized to fit beneath the hard palate. 
     Thus it is another object of the invention to provide an array that minimizes interference with tongue function. The tongue is highly mobile and may be moved against and away from a tongue based array as required. 
     The upwardly concave plate may be flanked at its lateral edges by bite bars wherein the mouth part may be stabilized within the mouth by a pressing of the bite bars between the teeth. Alternatively, a dental retainer design may be used with wire brackets engaging the teeth. 
     It is thus another object of the invention to allow an array that is easily placed within or removed from the mouth and stabilized there and then removed at will. 
     The mouth part may be a nipple sized to be stabilized within the mouth of a sucking infant. 
     Thus it is another object of the invention to allow the array to be adapted for infant use as part of a pacifier or the like to provide needed stimulation for sight impaired babies. 
     The array may include a receiver communicating with the excitation circuitry in receiving the spatially encoded signal as a radio wave. 
     It is thus another object of the invention to allow the array to be entirely contained within the mouth without obstructing or cumbersome electrical leads. Because electrical stimulation of the tongue requires only about three percent of the voltage as required by the fingertip and much less current, self-contained battery operation is possible. 
     The foregoing and other objects and advantages of the invention will appear from the following description. In this description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof and in which there is shown by way of illustration, the preferred embodiment of the invention. Such embodiment does not necessarily represent the full scope of the invention, however, and reference must be made therefore to the claims for interpreting the scope of the invention. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a first embodiment of the mouth-based human/machine interface system of the present invention seen from below according to its orientation within a user&#39;s mouth; 
     FIG. 2 is a phantom view of a person&#39;s head showing placement of the array within the mouth and showing the path of reception via free-space electromagnetic waves of image data from a camera attached to the frame of a pair of glasses; 
     FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing the circuit elements of the embodiments of FIGS. 1 and 2 including a switch array eliminating the need for a continuous ground plane; 
     FIG. 4 is a plan view of the bottom of a second embodiment of the human/machine interface system of the present invention in which the array is incorporated into a pacifier for infant use; 
     FIG. 5 is a timing diagram showing the delivery of electrical stimulation to three elements of the array of FIGS. 1 or  4  for producing various intensities or multidimensional stimulation; 
     FIG. 6 is a fragmentary cross-sectional view taken along line  6 — 6  of FIG. 1 showing the placement of the electrodes for stimulation in wells within an insulating plate against which the tongue may be placed; 
     FIG. 7 is a fragmentary cross sectional view taken along lines  6 — 6  of FIG. 1 showing an alternative embodiment of the electrode design without wells using a flexible printed circuit element; 
     FIG. 8 is a fragmentary plan view of the alternative embodiment of FIG. 7 showing an alternative ground plane construction; 
     FIG. 9 is a perspective view of the printed circuit element of FIG. 7 removed from the supporting structure; and 
     FIG. 10 is block diagram of an alternative embodiment of the mouth-based human/machine interface of the present invention providing for bi-directional communication to provide an integrated control device. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     Referring now to FIG. 1, a first embodiment of the mouth-placed tactile array unit  10  of the present invention includes a horseshoe shaped bite bar  12  sized to be held between the teeth of a typical adult user. An upwardly concave plate  14  spans the distance between the opposing legs of the bite bar  12  so as to fit against the hard palate of a user when the bite bar is held between the teeth. In an alternative embodiment, not shown in FIG. 1, the bite bar may be eliminated and the concave plate  14  used alone in the manner of a dental retainer, shown in FIG. 10, such as is well understood in the art. 
     In either case, exposed at a lower surface of plate  14  so as to receive the upper surface of the user&#39;s tongue, is an array  16  of electrodes  18  arranged generally in parallel rows and columns. It will be understood, however, that a regular spacing of the electrodes  18  need not be adhered to but that a variation in the spacing may occur for example to provide higher spatial resolution for certain portions of the tongue than others. In this regard, several peripheral electrodes  20  may be placed at the edges of the plate  14  to contact the sides of the tongue. 
     Referring to FIG. 6 in a first embodiment, each electrode  18  may be surrounded by a matrix of insulating material  22  and placed within a well  24  opening toward the tongue  26  when the tactile array unit  10  is in place within the mouth. The electrodes  18  may be flat-topped stainless steel pins. Individual wells  24  are spaced along the lower surface of the plate  14  by interwell regions of the insulating material  22  to encourage electrical stimulation of the tongue  26  rather than direct current flow between electrodes  18 . The wells remove the electrodes  18  from direct contact with the tongue  26  but allow for electrical conduction through saliva  28  which is refreshed by the action of the saliva glands in the mouth. 
     Referring now to FIGS. 7,  8  and  9 , more recent research has suggested that the wells  24  (of FIG. 6) providing a gap between the electrode  18  and the tongue  26  may cause variation in the perceived stimulation and cause adverse mechanical sensation during scanning. Further, because the tongue  26  appears to effectively continuously clean the electrode surface, a completely flat surface may be the best choice for a tongue electrode because saliva cannot build up in gaps. Accordingly, in an alternative embodiment, the wells are eliminated and the surface of the electrodes  18  are made flush or projecting above the insulating material  22 . 
     This latter embodiment shown in FIGS. 7 and 8, the electrodes may be realized as disk shaped pads  18 ′ on the lower surface of a flexible printed circuit board  63  fabricated by standard lithographic techniques known in the art. The electrodes  18 ′ may be etched copper that is then gold plated for bio-compatibility purposes on the surface of an insulating carrier  65  connected to photographically etched connector leads  64  on the other side of the carrier  65  by means of plate-through holes  66  known in the art. The flexible printed circuit board  63  may include an upper insulating layer  68  then embedded in the material of the plate  14 . 
     A ground plane  70  of copper plated with gold may be formed around the electrodes  18 ′ by etching annular gaps  72  about each electrode  18 ′ so that the electrodes  18 ′ are exposed within the gaps and the area outside the gaps  72  is electrically interconnected. The ground plane  70  is connected to provide a return path for electrical current from the electrodes  18 ′. 
     The flexibility of the flexible printed circuit board  63  allows increased flexibility of the retainer structure and the promise of improved comfort. The carrier  65  is preferably a polyester to maintain bio-compatibility and provide for minimal water absorption in the oral environment. The electrodes  18  in either embodiment may be stainless steel, titanium, platinum, gold or other bio-compatible conductor. 
     An example electrode array fabricated in this manner might include 144 electrodes arranged on a 2.3 mm grid to form an array approximately 3 cm square. The size and number of electrodes may be readily varied according to the following guidelines. Generally smaller electrodes can produce a stinging sensation whereas larger electrodes produce a comfortable vibratory perception at the expense of resolution. Presently 0.6 mm electrodes appear to be an acceptable compromise. 
     Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 3, the electrodes  18  and  20  communicate with a circuit block  30  which may be attached to the plate  14  toward its rear so as to minimize interference with the tongue. A study of retainers for a cross section of the populations suggests that a space of 23 by 15 by 2 mm is available at the back of the plate  14  or two spaces 12 by 9 by 4 mm. Theses spaces may hold a circuit block  30  together with a battery power source (not shown) encapsulated in the same insulating material  22  holding the array  16  and forming the bite bars  12 . 
     As will be described below, the circuit block  30  may communicate with external devices without direct connection thereto, by radio or the like. However, it will be recognized that in an alternative embodiment, the printed circuit material or a cable connected to the conductors of the printed circuit material may extend outside the mouth for direct connection to external processing electronics including the circuit block  30  eliminating the need for in-mouth electronic processing. 
     In yet another alternative, the circuit block may be incorporated into the plate but may derive its power from an external source, for example, low frequency induction or the like. 
     Each electrode  18  is connected to a switch array  34  within the circuit block  30 . The individual leads connecting the electrodes  18  to the switch array  34  are embedded in an insulated matrix which may be cast or formed about the electronics. Flexible printed circuit technology, as is well understood in the art, may be used to provide interconnections between the electrodes and the electronics in the case where the electrodes are not part of the printed circuits. An insulating cover is placed over the printed circuit wiring so that the latter is sandwiched between the insulating substrate of the printed circuit material and the insulating cover. 
     The switch array holds a series of solid state switches  36  activated by multiplexer lines  38  from a multiplexer  40 . Each solid state switch  36  has a throw connected to one electrode  18  and two poles allowing the throw to be connected to either a pulse source  42  or ground  44  depending on the state of a multiplexer line  38 . 
     The multiplexer  40  controlling the multiplexer lines  38 , and the pulse source  42  receive data from a receiver  47  comprising location information  46  and intensity or multidimensional stimulation information  50 . When the data is an image, the location information  46  is the location of a pixel value within the image and the intensity information is the intensity of the pixel (when the image is black and white) or the full or partial color value of the pixel. 
     In operation, the location information  46  is passed to the multiplexer typically based on an implicit ordering of the data points received by the receiver  47 . The multiplexer  40  drives selected ones of the multiplexer lines  38  to scan through the electrodes  18  activating one electrode  18  at a time by connecting it through solid state switch  36  to the pulse source  42  and connecting the surrounding electrodes or all other electrodes to ground  44  or other return via their solid state switches  36 . The particular electrode  18  being stimulated is successively changed according to the location information so that all electrodes  18  are stimulated in sequence over a period of a scan. Typically the electrodes  18  will be scanned in a raster pattern moving across each row and then returning to the first row at the next column until all electrodes have been scanned. Alternatively the electrodes may be scanned to follow the outline of the object as determined by standard edge detecting morphometric techniques. 
     Referring also to FIG. 5, the amount of stimulation of a given electrode  18  is according to the intensity information  50 . In the simplest embodiment, the intensity information is binary and each electrode  18  receives either a monophasic (zero net DC) pulse or no pulse so that simple shapes may be detected. For continuous perception of a “tingle” or “vibration”, the electrode is pulsed for 5-50 μs at a rate of 10-400 pulses per second. The pulses may be either current controlled (0.4-4.0 ma) or voltage controlled (5-15 volts). As is understood in the art, current control means the value of the current is defined and the voltage adjusted to produce that current at the tongue, whereas voltage control means the voltage is defined and the current adjusted to produce that voltage at the tongue. In the preferred embodiment, when an electrode  18  is selected by the multiplexer  40 , multidimensional intensity information  50  is provided to the pulse source  42  which produces a pulse  52  that may vary in any one of six parameters: pulse height (measured as current or voltage or power), pulse width, the interval between pulses, the number of pulses in a burst, the interval between bursts and the frame rate (i.e., the time between successive scans of the array), as a function of the intensity information  50 . These latter five parameters define generally the spectral characteristics of the pulses. All six parameters in the waveforms can, in principle, be varied independently within certain ranges, and may elicit potentially distinct responses. 
     A pulse source  42  providing suitable pulses (but sized so as to be usable only outside of the mouth, is commercially available from Unitech Research Inc. of Madison, Wisconsin under the tradename VideoTact. 
     As depicted in FIG. 5, three successive electrodes  18   a,    18   b  and  18   c  receive a pulse  52  at different times according to their order within the array  16 . Each pulse  52  is composed of subpulses  51  which allow simple control of the frequency content and energy of the pulse  52 . When a given electrode (e.g.,  18   a ) is being stimulated with a pulse  52 , the other electrodes (e.g.,  18   b  and  18   c ) are in the ground state providing a return path for the electrical current. As depicted, pulse  18   b  has a lower amplitude  54  and different frequency content than pulse  18   a  and pulse  18   c  has a different pulse width  55 . To the extent that a trained user may simultaneously distinguish between multiple of these characteristics of amplitude, width and frequency, the pulses  52  may convey multidimensional information in much the same way that the eye perceives color from the independent stimulation of different color receptors. 
     Although as depicted, each pulse  52  is completed prior to the next electrode  18  being selected by the multiplexer  40 , it will be understood that this need not be the case but that the subpulses  51  of the pulses  52  may be interleaved with the subpulses  51  of other pulses  52  to allow faster scanning and lower frequency content pulses  52 . Thus, for example, each subpulse  51  may be on the order of 25 microseconds but separated by five milliseconds from the next with the scanning period for an electrode array being less than 5 milliseconds so that the first subpulse  51  for each electrode  18  may occur before the second subpulse  51 . 
     As will be understood in the art, the pulses may be either current or voltage controlled and thus the height depicted in FIG. 5 may be a current or voltage, the two being related by the intrinsic resistance of the tongue electrode interface. Generally both current and voltage limits are imposed on the pulses  52 . 
     It will be understood that other techniques for stimulating the electrodes  18  of the array  16  may be used including those which consider not only the intensity information  50  of individual data points but the intensity information  50  of adjacent data points to provide edge enhancement and the like. Further the mapping of the location information 46 data points and the particular electrodes  18  may be changed so as to provide for a zooming effect in which the image is “enlarged” on the array  16 . The amount of zoom could be controlled by an external controller (not shown) or by sensing electrodes in the mouth itself. Particularly with regard to zooming, the peripheral electrodes  20  may be used to provide an indication of a composite intensity information  50  of groups of data points outside of the array  16  so as to, for example, mimic peripheral vision in which a presence of an object off-center may be detected though not fully resolved. 
     Referring now to FIG. 2 in a primary embodiment, the visual data received by the receiver may be image data from a miniaturized camera  56 , for example, employing a solid state CCD or charge-coupled device type detector. So as to eliminate the need for wires to conduct the image data from the camera  56  to the tactile array unit  10 , that data may be transmitted by radio waves via transmitting and receiving antennae  45  according to techniques well known in the art. For example, FM modulated radio frequency signals may be used, or given the close proximity of the camera  56  to the tactile array unit  10 , directly modulated low frequency magnetic fields employed. As used herein, radio waves should be held to embrace electromagnetic waves of any frequency. In this case, the wire clips of the retainer structure could serve as an antenna. The camera  56  may be mounted on glass frames  58  and the necessary transmitting electronics supported on a temple  61  of the glass frames to be close to and stabily positioned with respect to the circuit block  30  holding the receiver  47 . Proximity sensing electronics may be incorporated to conserve battery power for the tactile array unit  10  when it has been removed from the mouth of a user. 
     In a second embodiment of the invention shown in FIG. 4, the array  16  may have its electrodes  18  exposed from the lower surface of a nipple  60  forming a part of a pacifier  62  having an outward shape similar to ordinary pacifiers well known in the art. In infants, mouth suction control is present at the earliest age and so the nipple  60  could be retained and stabilized within the mouth by such suction action. The camera  56  is positioned on the portion of the pacifier  62  extending out of the baby&#39;s mouth normally reserved for a pivoting ring or the like and aligned optically with the long axis of the nipple  60  so that the infant&#39;s face is directed toward the source of the image in a natural manner. The circuit block  30  is in this case retained within the body of the pacifier itself a portion of which remains outside the infant&#39;s mouth. A direct connection between the camera  56  and the electronics may be had eliminating the need for the radio link. It is believed that the stimulation provided to sight impaired infants could help develop the neural pathways used in image processing. It will be understood that the pacifier configuration may also be used for adults and that the signal providing for zoom or other control of the tactile image or for other output purposes may be provided by the user by biting switches positioned between the teeth. 
     The cameras described above may employ CMOS type image circuitry to create so-called “active pixel” devices in which image processing may be performed on the same die as that which hold the light sensing array. Such processing may include but is not limited to compression, edge or contrast enhancement, motion detection and even generation of the stimulus pattern to be used by the electrode array. A camera suitable for use with the present invention is commercially available from Austria Micro Systems of Austria and features a matrix of 64 by 64 pixels in a 2 by 2 mm square using conventional 1.3 μm double metal double poly CMOS process and providing on-chip logarithmic compression with different gains and time constants for static and dynamic illumination so as to mimic the human retina. This camera has demonstrated a dynamic range of about eight orders of magnitude in incident light intensity and a slope ratio of about 30:1 between the static and dynamic cases. Digitization of the signals is accomplished on chip. 
     Referring now to FIG. 10, the data received by the tactile array unit  10  need not be visual data but for example may provide tactile data for example from a sensor  80 , for persons with a limb prosthesis or astronauts who must wear heavy gloves or operators of remote manipulators. The tactile data may include information about shape, shear forces, pressure and slip. One promising tactile sensor employs an elliptically shaped elastomeric membrane filled with a clear fluid the inner surface of the membrane is imprinted with a pattern so that deformation of the membrane by touching an object deforms the pattern in a way detectable by a camera aimed at the membranes inner surface. Gloves for leprosy patients with insensate hands or insoles for diabetic patients with insensate feet can be used with the present invention where the tactile data is conveyed to the mouth. The present invention may accept tactile data from a penile sheath for spinal cord injured patients who have lost sexual sensation. 
     The tactile data may be received by processing electronics  82 , for example, a microprocessor processing the image from the camera system described above, and then transmitted by transceiver  84  to the tactile array unit  10 . In order to provide an integrated mouth-based controller, the tactile array unit  10  may include one or more mouth-based sensors  79  that may be activated by the tongue  26  (not shown). In its simplest form the sensors  79  are conventional mechanical switches such as membrane switches incorporated into the material of the plate  14  but may also be electronic sensors detecting tongue placement using conventional impedance sensing techniques. The signal output from the sensors  80  of the tactile array unit  10  may be received by the transceiver  84  and conveyed through the processing electronics  82  to an actuator  86  such as a robot hand. Such a system could provide, for example, control of a robotics hand for persons with quadriplegia where the sensor  80  is one or more tactile sensors and the actuator is one or more robot axis motors. 
     The mouth-based sensors  79 , in the alternative, may detect mouth chemistry using techniques known in the art, and may be combined with the tactile array unit  10  of the present invention to provide the user with an indication of blood levels of Nitrogen or CO 2  or the like, such as may be useful for divers. 
     When a camera is the input sensor to the tactile array unit  10 , it need not be limited to a visible light range but may be a night vision camera or infrared vision camera (for example, for pilots or drivers) where bypassing the retina in favor of the tongue eliminates retinal delay. Image or non-image data may be used to augment visual information received by sighted individuals for example in infrared regions, ultrasonic or radar images for avionics and the like. Nor must the input be conventional sensory type inputs such as vision or touch or sound but may be fundamental data, for example, such as navigational direction and orientation for scuba divers and the like prone to becoming disoriented. For military purposes, the mouth-based HMI of the present invention relieves over-dependence on the visual pathways and may have as an input “take immediate action” indicators, such as those from collision avoidance systems in aircraft, or may provide expanded “peripheral vision” about enemy planes or missiles approaching from the side or rear. General communication functions could be provided through such an HMI for secret communications. 
     A number of other applications are possible for the present invention including aiding drivers in fog or race car drivers who need faster response times. On a more prosaic level, the tactile array unit may be used to augment video game output or provide for communication in very noisy environments or where sound is not permitted and for operation of machinery requiring extensive use of the hands such as crane operators or those manipulating contaminated nuclear materials. 
     The above description has been that of a preferred embodiment of the invention. It will occur to those that practice the art that many modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example the scanning approach of the electrodes may be replaced with a simultaneous excitation of electrodes  18  when the continuous ground plane is used. Likewise although electronic stimulation is preferred, other forms of stimulation may be appropriate for use on the tongue should technology allow its miniaturization such as vibration-type stimulators. 
     In order to apprise the public of various embodiments that may fall within the scope of the invention the following claims are made.

Technology Classification (CPC): 0