Introduction

When we move our bodies, a complex communication loop is formed between our brains and our extremities. Our brains send efferent commands to our limbs instructing them to move in a specific way. As our limbs carry out these commands, they also send afferent proprioceptive signals back to the brain detailing the positions, speeds, and forces of the limb1. From these afferent signals, modifications to the efferent neural drive can correct movement errors and ensure smooth limb control2.

Both communication paths are represented by a corresponding internal model. Forward internal models predict future limb movements taking into account the limb’s current configuration and descending signals, while inverse internal models predict the motor command resulting in the limb’s current movement3. To develop, adapt, and improve control of the limb over time, these models require knowledge of efferent motor commands (i.e. efference copy) and of the limb’s current configuration and movement (i.e. proprioception). Lack of these proprioceptive signals hampers internal model development and is detrimental to limb control, especially inter-joint coordination4,5. Despite its importance in understanding and correcting limb movement, this sense of proprioception is missing for commercially-available robotic prosthetic limbs.

Sensory feedback remains a research priority for prosthesis users6. Recent technologies can restore these missing senses via physiologically-analogous stimuli, such as peripheral nerve stimulation7,8 and vibration-induced illusory kinesthesia9. However, a more common approach uses sensory substitution, in which information from a missing sensory channel is provided indirectly via a separate, intact sensory channel10. Numerous substitution methods have been proposed over the past decades, including vibrotactile11,12,13,14,15, electrotactile12, skin stretch11, and audio16,17,18 modalities19. What is often not considered is that prosthesis users are already using a form of sensory substitution: vision. Thus, providing information that is also available to vision may be redundant.

Vision is capable of estimating grasping force similarly to tactile feedback20, though several grasping force feedback studies still show significant benefit to prosthesis control with vision present. However, many proprioceptive feedback studies are conducted with sight of the prosthesis obscured, and the benefit of proprioceptive feedback often diminishes when subjects can see the prosthesis. During everyday use, prosthesis users visually monitor their device, adopting a distinct gaze pattern. Able-bodied gaze behavior preempts limb movement with eye saccade towards the object of interest21, but prosthesis user gaze tends to track the movement of their prosthesis until it reaches the target22. This visual monitoring serves to replace the missing proprioception.

When sensory substitution feedback is provided in the presence of vision, the two modalities are integrated according to a weighted sum based on each modality’s uncertainty23. Visual estimates of position are highly precise, capable of perceiving changes as small as 1%24. In some cases, vision is more precise than even intact proprioception25. On the other hand, vision estimates speed with a discrimination threshold of 10%26 and a bias towards slower speeds and non-movement (i.e. position)27. For either position or speed, if artificial feedback can’t match visual precision, it will be largely ignored in favor of vision. Thus, providing sensory feedback about prosthesis speed should yield a greater benefit than prosthesis position. However, there are several definitions of speed relevant to the movement of a limb.

Limb speed can be defined by the coordinate system (linear speed in Cartesian coordinates, angular speed in polar coordinates) and by the reference frame (absolute speed within a global reference frame, relative speed within a joint-based reference frame). Likewise, feedback provided in joint or global reference frames develop internal models differently, resulting in different generalization to intrinsic or extrinsic error sources28. In addition, feedback concerning joint errors is always relevant, but feedback concerning extrinsic errors are only relevant under specific conditions29. Despite the importance of joint feedback on tuning the internal models of upper-limb movement, it is not known how precisely vision can perceive joint speed, and thus how effectively artificial proprioceptive feedback can be integrated into such estimates.

The purpose of this study was to investigate visual joint speed perception of biomimetic arm motions, and to determine if these visual joint speed estimates can be augmented with artificial sensory feedback. Subjects observed a virtual two-link arm, analogous to a top-down view of a shoulder, elbow, and hand. Stimuli differed only in the reference frame of interest, and subjects completed two-alternative forced choice tasks to determine just noticeable difference (JND) thresholds. We also tested how joint speed JND varies due to changes in reference frame speed. Finally, we tested a frequency-modulated audio feedback paradigm to evaluate its ability to augment visual speed discrimination.

Methods

Subjects

Experiments were approved by the Northwestern University Institutional Review Board. Methods were carried out in accordance with IRB approval. All subjects provided informed consent before beginning each study. Eight subjects participated in the first and second experiments. Based on a power analysis of simulations using these data, four subjects from the second experiment also participated in the third experiment30.

Setup

All protocol and data collection were executed using MATLAB R2017b. Subjects sat in front of a 15.5-inch 1920 × 1080 resolution computer monitor at a distance of 24–36 inches. The screen displayed a black two-link system over a uniform white background (Figs 1 and 2). The arm had link lengths of 5 cm, widths of 5 points (1.8 mm), and endcap diameters of 6 points (2.1 mm).

Figure 1
figure 1

Experiment 1 Setup and Conditions. Assessed component is highlighted green, while all other components are displayed black. Fixture markings in grey are shown here for clarity but were not displayed during experiments. (a) Absolute speed condition. Subjects assessed highlighted proximal link speed in three speed conditions: 30, 60, or 120 °/s. Distal link rotated at 60 °/s. (b) Joint speed condition. Subjects assessed highlighted distal link speed in three speed conditions: 30, 60, or 120 °/s. Proximal link rotated at 60 °/s. (c) Linear speed condition. Subjects assessed highlighted endpoint speed in three speed conditions: 2, 4, or 8 cm/s. Proximal and distal links were driven by endpoint position.

Figure 2
figure 2

Experiment 2 Setup and Conditions. For each shift condition, subjects assessed highlighted joint speed in three speed conditions: 30, 60, or 120 °/s. Fixture markings in grey are shown here for clarity but were not displayed during experiments. (a) No shift condition. Reference frame rotated at 60 °/s. (b) Small shift condition. Reference frame rotated at 60 °/s in one stimulus, and 85 °/s in the other stimulus (c) Large shift condition. Reference frame rotated at 60 °/s in one stimulus, and 120 °/s in the other stimulus.

Each visual stimulus was presented for 2 seconds, with a 1 second pause between stimuli during which only the white background was shown. Animations were presented at 30 frames per second. Subjects were asked to indicate which stimulus moved faster in the dictated reference frame via a pop-up window prompt. Subjects had unimpaired or corrected vision.

Experiments

Three two-alternative forced choice experiments investigated different aspects of visual speed discrimination. During each experiment, two examples of the two-link arm were displayed to subjects in random order. One stimulus always moved at a nominal speed, whereas the other stimulus differed from the nominal speed by a magnitude determined by an adaptive staircase. The adaptive staircase was defined as:

$$x(n+1)=x(n)-\frac{C}{{n}_{shift}+1}[z(n)-\varphi ]$$
(1)

where x was the difference in movement speeds between stimuli, C was the starting speed difference, nshift was the number of decision reversals, ϕ was the target JND probability (84%), and z was a Boolean indicator for the subject’s decision (z = 1 when correct and z = 0 when incorrect)31. Thus, when subjects correctly identified the faster stimulus, the speed difference between stimuli decreased for the next trial. Likewise, if subjects incorrectly selected the slower stimulus, the speed difference between stimuli increased for the next trial.

The JND for each condition was calculated as the final stimulus difference x tested in the adaptive staircase, which converged after 25 decision reversals. The 84% JND has a unique property32 in that it is linearly variable with the uncertainty (i.e. standard deviation) of the underlying estimator:

$$SD=\frac{JN{D}_{84 \% }}{\sqrt{2}}$$
(2)

Thus, the 84% JND was converted to uncertainty, normalized, and used as the outcome metric for statistical analyses.

Experiment 1: Effect of Speed Type

To determine how discrimination differs between categories of movements, three speed types were tested: absolute speed, joint speed, and linear speed (Fig. 1). These speed types correspond with different types of proprioceptive feedback that could be provided for prosthetic limbs: speed of a prosthetic joint relative to the torso (absolute) or residual limb (joint), or speed of the prosthetic end effector (linear).

Absolute speed refers to rotational movement relative to a global, static reference frame. In this condition, the proximal link moved at a nominal speed of either 30, 60, or 120 °/s counter-clockwise (CCW) for one stimulus, and a speed determined by the adaptive staircase in Equation (1) for the other stimulus, starting at C = 50%. The distal link moved at a nominal speed of 60 °/s CCW and accelerated and decelerated randomly but equally for both stimuli; thus, the movement profile was not constant, but was identical for both stimuli (Fig. 1a).

Joint speed refers to rotational movement relative to a dynamic reference frame, in this case the proximal link. In this condition, the proximal link moved at a nominal speed of 60 °/s CCW and accelerated and decelerated randomly but equally for both stimuli; thus, the movement profile was not constant, but was identical for both stimuli. The distal link moved at a nominal speed of either 30, 60, or 120 °/s CCW for one stimulus, and a speed determined by the adaptive staircase in Equation (1) for the other stimulus, starting at C = 50% (Fig. 1b).

The random acceleration and deceleration on the proximal link during the joint speed condition was implemented to prevent subjects observing absolute speed to estimate joint speed of the distal link by varying the speed of the reference frame. The random acceleration and deceleration on the distal link during the absolute speed condition was implemented to match the joint speed condition, even though it likely had no effect on estimates.

Linear speed refers to movement in a straight line relative to a static Cartesian reference frame. In this condition, the linkage endpoint moved along a straight path at a constant speed of either 2, 4, or 8 cm/s for one stimulus, and a speed determined by the adaptive staircase in Equation (1) for the other stimulus, starting at C = 50%. The links were driven by inverse kinematics to follow the endpoint (Fig. 1c).

Thus, a total of 9 conditions were tested: 3 speed types, with 3 tested speeds each. Starting positions were randomized for all trials. For absolute and joint speed trials, the distal link was prevented from crossing the proximal link during movement; invalid starting positions were resampled until conditions were met. Proximal and distal link speeds were bounded between 0 and 180 °/s, preventing clockwise movement and invalid starting positions due to resampling. For linear speed trials, the starting position and movement direction were resampled if the endpoint trajectory exceeded the range of the linkage, or if the endpoint didn’t move CCW relative to the origin. The proximal link, distal link, or endpoint were highlighted according to the tested condition.

Statistical analyses performed in RStudio (RStudio, Inc., version 1.1.447) quantified main and interaction effects of the speed type and the observed nominal speed. A Shapiro-Wilk test confirmed normality of the data. A general linear model took the form:

$$SD\sim {\beta }_{0}+speed+type+speed\times type$$

where speed was coded as a continuous independent variable in units of octaves (0 at slowest speed, 2 at fastest), and type was coded as a categorical independent variable. Because the interaction term was found to be significant, a simple main effects analysis was performed for speed33. Corrections for 6 comparisons were made via a Bonferroni correction factor.

Experiment 2: Effect of Reference Frame Speed Shift

While the first experiment provided an estimate of joint speed perception, it only did so at one reference frame speed. Although results showed a higher uncertainty for joint speed observations than for absolute or linear speed observations, it did not shed any light on possible interaction between changes to the reference frame speed and visual uncertainty. Further, one concern from the first experiment was that during joint speed conditions, subjects could conceivably identify the faster joint speed of two stimuli by observing either the joint speed or the absolute rotational speed of the distal link. This ambiguity left open the possibility that the higher uncertainty was due to observing a faster absolute speed, rather than due to the joint speed nature of the observation itself. We therefore developed a second experiment to determine how joint speed discrimination differs due to changes in reference frame speed. This experiment investigates visual perception of a prosthetic limb while the residual limb is moving non-uniformly. In this experiment, three reference frame conditions were tested. The proximal link rotated at 60 °/s CCW for one stimulus, and a shifted speed of 60, 85, or 120 °/s CCW for the other stimulus; these speeds correspond with an increase of 0, ½, or 1 octave above 60 °/s, respectively. The distal link rotated at 30, 60, or 120 °/s CCW for one stimulus, and a speed determined by the adaptive staircase in Equation (1) for the other stimulus, starting at C = 50%. Thus, a total of 9 conditions were tested: 3 reference frame speed shifts, with 3 distal link speeds each (Fig. 2). Each link was highlighted green at the joint, with a highlight length of 2 cm.

Statistical analyses were performed to quantify how reference frame speed shift magnitude affects uncertainty. A Shapiro-Wilk test confirmed normality of the data. A multiple linear regression model took the form:

$$SD\sim {\beta }_{0}+speed+shift+speed\times shift$$

where speed and shift were coded as continuous independent variables. The interaction term was used to determine if shift magnitude impacts uncertainty differently at different speeds. The interaction term was not found to be significant (B = 0.0002, t(68) = 0.304, p = 0.762), thus the term was removed and the reduced model was reanalyzed33.

After inspecting the data, post-hoc analyses tested the pairs of stimuli subjects chose incorrectly. There were two possible stimulus pairs: one where the speed shift of the reference frame aligned with the faster of the two stimuli, and one where the speed shift occurred with the slower of the two stimuli. The former pair might be considered an easier choice – the correct answer with the faster distal link happens to be the stimulus with the faster proximal link – while the latter pair might be considered a more difficult choice – the correct answer with the faster distal link is the stimulus with the slower proximal link. Therefore, we wanted to determine if speed or shift impacted the rate of errors due to unaligned stimulus changes (the difficult choice). If there was no impact, subjects should make roughly the same number of errors during aligned pairs and unaligned pairs.

Post-hoc statistical analyses were performed using a multiple linear regression model taking the form:

$$Rate\sim {\beta }_{0}+speed+shift+speed\times shift$$

where speed and shift were coded as continuous independent variables. A Shapiro-Wilk test confirmed normality of the data. The interaction term was not found to be significant (B = 0.280, t(44) = 1.098, p = 0.278), thus the term was removed and the reduced model was reanalyzed33.

Experiment 3: Effect of Audio Feedback

To determine if joint speed estimates could be improved with supplementary feedback, the no shift conditions from the second experiment were repeated. Subjects were provided frequency-modulated audio feedback matching the joint speed of stimuli according to the following equation:

$$f(\omega )={f}_{min}\cdot {2}^{\frac{\omega }{{V}_{step}}}$$
(3)

where fmin was the minimum frequency which was provided when joint speed was zero, and Vstep was the speed increase required to increase the audio feedback pitch by one octave. For this study, fmin was set to 220 Hz (A3), and Vstep was set to 60 °/s. Audio signals were generated and output with a sampling frequency of 48 kHz. Subjects wore noise-cancelling headphones, and audio was played at a moderate volume. Based on pilot studies, the starting difference C between joint speeds was set at 10% to allow the adaptive staircase to converge more smoothly.

Statistical analyses were performed using a general linear model taking the form:

$$SD\sim {\beta }_{0}+speed+feedback+speed\times feedback$$

where speed was coded as a continuous independent variable and feedback was coded as a categorical independent variable. A Shapiro-Wilk test confirmed normality of the data. The purpose of this model was to determine if vision + audio improved joint speed discrimination beyond vision. The interaction term determined if the benefit of audio feedback was partially dependent on distal link speed, or if benefit was global. A main effects analysis compared vision and vision + audio. Because the interaction term was significant, and a simple main effects analysis was performed for speed33. Corrections for 3 comparisons were made via a Bonferroni correction factor.

Results

Experiment 1: Effect of Speed Type

The purpose of Experiment 1 was to investigate how visual speed uncertainty differed between absolute, joint, and linear speed types. In addition, comparing uncertainty across a range of speeds revealed the degree to which uncertainty of each speed type is speed-invariant.

Main effect analysis revealed higher uncertainty for Joint speed than either Absolute (t(36.34) = 4.26, p = 0.0008, d = 1.23) or Linear speeds (t(42.79) = 4.24, p = 0.0007, d = 1.22). Absolute and Linear speeds were not significantly different (t(42.63) = 0.44, p > 0.999, d = 0.128) (Fig. 3). Thus, our results suggest vision is most uncertain about joint speed observations, and therefore augmenting joint speed with artificial sensory feedback should yield the greatest improvement in precision.

Figure 3
figure 3

Effect of Speed Type. Uncertainty generally decreases with increasing stimulus speed. Joint speed discrimination is worse than either absolute or linear speed, especially at slow nominal speeds. Error bars show standard error of the mean (SEM). (*)p < 0.05, (***)p < 0.001.

Uncertainty decreased with increasing speed for absolute (B = −0.053, t(22) = 3.18, p = 0.026), linear (B = −0.067, t(22) = 2.99, p = 0.041), and joint (B = −0.127, t(22) = 5.59, p < 0.0001) speed types. Significant interaction between speed and type (F4,66 = 3.60, p = 0.033, η2partial = 0.098) suggests that this decrease in uncertainty at higher speeds differs between speed types. This interaction is likely due to the large increase in uncertainty for joint speed at low speeds. In the slowest joint speed condition, the assessed joint speed was half as fast as the reference frame speed. Therefore, most of the absolute speed of the distal link was contributed by the proximal link movement, possibly obfuscating the joint speed.

Our results suggest greater uncertainty for visual estimates of joint speed, compared to absolute speed, for biomimetic motions. However, these results alone cannot tell us if this greater uncertainty is due to poorer precision of joint speed estimates, or if subjects were estimating the faster absolute speed of the distal link. To remove the confounding factor of being able to estimate joint speed using either method, we followed up with Experiment 2.

Experiment 2: Effect of Reference Frame Speed Shift

Experiment 2 expands upon the joint speed results from Experiment 1 by exploring the effect of reference frame speed shift on joint speed uncertainty. Thus, subjects were unable to make joint speed estimates by observing only the absolute speed of the distal link and were required to consider the speed of the proximal link serving as the moving reference frame.

Main effects analysis showed that both speed (B = −0.0024, t(69) = 9.02, p < 0.0001) and shift (B = 0.0773, t(69) = 3.12, p = 0.0026) significantly affected uncertainty (Fig. 4a). The change in uncertainty associated with changing joint speed confirms the results from Experiment 1 showing similar trends. Additionally, the increase in uncertainty resulting from increased reference frame speed shifts suggests that vision cannot completely filter out reference frame movement during joint speed observations and provides further evidence that joint speed estimates are more uncertain than absolute speed estimates.

Figure 4
figure 4

Effect of Reference Frame Speed Shift. (a) Psychophysics results show that increased proximal link speed shift led to increased uncertainty. Error bars show SEM. (b) Shift and increasing joint speed results in an overestimation in joint speed, as shown by an increase in error rate of unaligned trials. The dashed horizontal line indicates the ideal ratio of aligned- to unaligned trials. Error bars show SEM. (**)p < 0.01, (***)p < 0.001.

Post-hoc analyses investigated if either speed or shift affected the proportion of incorrect stimulus selections where the selected joint speed was slower, but the reference frame moved faster, than the correct stimulus. This rate increased significantly during trials with higher joint speed (B = 0.293, t(45) = 4.59, p < 0.0001), but was not affected by shift magnitude (B = −3.120, t(45) = 0.33, p = 0.746) (Fig. 4b). This result provides further evidence that vision cannot completely ignore reference frame movement during joint speed observations; instead, reference frame movement may result in an overestimation of, especially, faster joint speeds.

Our results suggest vision cannot completely account for the effect of a moving reference frame when making joint speed estimates, and that a moving reference frame may result in overestimation of the joint speed. Having shown that uncertainty of visual joint speed estimates is greater than absolute speed estimates, we move on to Experiment 3 to determine if vision can be augmented with artificial sensory feedback.

Experiment 3: Effect of Augmentation

Experiment 3 served as a proof-of-concept to show that visual perception of joint speed could be significantly improved with audio feedback. The procedure for Experiment 3 was the same as that for Experiment 2, but subjects wore noise-canceling headphones playing frequency-modulated audio feedback proportional to the speed of the distal joint (i.e. joint speed). Subjects combined visual and auditory cues to arrive at a single joint speed estimate. Main effects analysis revealed significant improvement in uncertainty with audio feedback, over vision alone (t(11.06) = 8.14, p < 0.0001, d = 3.32), providing clear evidence of visual augmentation (Fig. 5).

Figure 5
figure 5

Effect of Augmentation. Visual perception of joint speed is dependent on speed, but audio feedback perception of joint speed is largely speed invariant. Error bars show SEM. (**)p < 0.01, (***)p < 0.001.

Simple main effects analysis revealed speed-varying uncertainty for both vision (B = −0.0028, t(10) = 4.93, p = 0.0018) and vision + audio (B = −0.0001, t(10) = 3.86, p = 0.0094). In addition, interaction between feedback and speed (F1,23 = 21.85, p = 0.0001, η2partial = 0.522) suggests these main effects differ between conditions, particularly that joint speed perception with vision + audio is more speed-invariant than joint speed perception with only vision. Overall, our results suggest our audio feedback paradigm is sufficient to augment vision when estimating joint speed.

Discussion

In this study, we investigated visual speed perception of biomimetic arm motions to gain insights for providing sensory feedback for prosthetic limbs. In the first experiment, our results showed that discrimination of linear or absolute speed is between 20% and 30%, whereas discrimination of joint speed is between 30% and 60% (Fig. 3). In the context of providing feedback for prosthetic limbs, our results suggest that providing joint speed feedback will yield the largest improvement to artificial proprioception when users are also able to see the prosthesis.

In the second experiment, our results revealed that variations in the speed of the reference frame reduced discriminatory ability of joint speed observations (Fig. 4a). In post-hoc analyses, we also determined that subjects became more likely to perceive a slower joint speed in a faster reference frame as a faster joint speed, resulting in more incorrect selections (Fig. 4b). This may suggest a multiplicative effect of reference frame speed on joint speed perception. While we found no significant interaction effect between joint speed and shift, interaction between the two may have plateaued below the magnitudes tested. It is possible that this multiplicative effect arises at smaller reference frame speed shift magnitudes, but further experiments would be required to show this effect. In the context of providing feedback for prosthetic limbs, this second experiment provides evidence that visual joint speed perception is more variable when moving within a time-varying reference frame, such as a prosthetic hand and wrist moving relative to a user’s biological shoulder and elbow. As such, providing joint speed feedback should be most beneficial during tasks requiring coordinated synchronous movement of both robotic and biological joints.

In the third experiment, we showed that visual joint speed estimates can be successfully supplemented with artificial sensory feedback. We provided subjects with frequency-modulated audio cues encoding the speed of the distal link. By playing this joint speed feedback alongside the visual stimuli, joint speed discrimination was reduced below 1%. Additionally, whereas visual discriminatory power varied across nominal speeds, joint speed discrimination was largely invariant with joint speed changes when audio feedback was provided (Fig. 5). This experiment was conducted with no shift to the proximal link speed, the condition with the greatest visual joint speed perception. Because audio feedback is dependent solely on joint speed, proximal link speed shifts which negatively affect visual perception would have no effect on audio perception. Thus, joint speed feedback would provide greater benefits during tasks requiring inter-joint coordination.

Taken together, these results suggest joint speed audio feedback may improve the sense of proprioception for prosthesis users, even when the prosthetic limb is still visible and especially while the residual limb is in motion. This strengthened sensory feedback should, in turn, strengthen internal models associated with reaching tasks, resulting in improved motor learning and control3. These benefits may extend beyond prosthetic limbs to include other applications such as robot teleoperated tasks.

Because sensory feedback is merged inversely proportional to each modality’s uncertainty23, sensory feedback encoding position will likely not significantly augment proprioception of a prosthetic limb unless it matches or exceeds vision’s 1% uncertainty24 or encodes information in a novel way, such as tactile sensation8,15 or discrete events in grasping13. However, our study suggests that sensory feedback encoding prosthetic joint speed may more significantly augment proprioception of a prosthetic limb due to higher uncertainty in visual estimates of limb joint speed. Additionally, sensory feedback provided for intrinsic joint coordinates should always be relevant to limb control, as opposed to feedback provided in extrinsic coordinates, which may only be conditionally relevant29. This persistent relevance would ensure greater generalizability to novel tasks during motor learning with a prosthetic limb28. Finally, joint speed in this context is synonymous with the robotic motor command; thus, no additional sensors are required to encode joint speed for prosthesis feedback.

The major limitation of our work is that all speed estimates were made in a controlled environment: only the two-arm link was shown on screen over a uniform white background, and subjects wore noise-canceling headphones during audio feedback trials. Subjects were exposed to neither the distractions nor divided attention that occur with daily prosthesis use. Additionally, subjects were not asked to control the simulated limb while assessing joint speed, and subjects were able to devote their full attention to visual estimates. Thus, showing that the audio feedback can be incorporated into speed estimates does not necessarily mean that the information will be incorporated meaningfully during user-in-the-loop control tasks. Prosthesis users typically visually track their prosthesis while in use until they reach an object of interest, at which point visual attention is shared between the object and the prosthesis end effector22, but there is no guarantee that prosthesis users with sensory feedback would revert to able-bodied eye gaze behavior21. To address this limitation, future real-time experiments will determine the added benefit of joint feedback during reaching tasks.

A limitation of Experiment 2 is that only positive reference frame shifts were tested (Fig. 2). The purpose of this experiment was to remove the possibility that subjects were approximating joint speed by estimating absolute speed of the distal link. Shifts slowing down the reference frame would make it easier for subjects to approximate joint speed with absolute speed estimates, so we opted to only test shifts increasing the reference frame speed. To more rigorously quantify psychophysical measures and the effect of reference frame shifts as a confounding factor, a fully-blocked design with different nominal reference frame speeds, joint speeds, and shift magnitudes and directions would be required.

In this study, audio feedback only provided joint speed information for a single degree of freedom. However, it is unknown how well users will understand feedback presented simultaneously for multiple degrees of freedom. Subjective feedback during a previous study revealed subjects found it difficult to understand amplitude-modulated audio feedback for a two-degree-of-freedom virtual limb34, though other studies have demonstrated subjects are capable of understanding frequency-modulated audio feedback for two degrees of freedom18. Another option is to provide feedback through a different modality, such as vibrotactile, and encode active degree of freedom via stimulus location. Further psychophysical experiments would be necessary to characterize the discriminatory power of simultaneous feedback.

Audio feedback has been shown to strengthen a user’s internal model and improve their myoelectric prosthesis control performance18, however audio feedback may not be viable for daily use. Many myoelectric prosthesis users exploit sound and vibrations from the motors as a proxy for proprioceptive information20,35, but this motor noise may also diminish the perceived cosmesis of the limb. Additionally, audio feedback may interfere with activities of daily living requiring unobstructed hearing, such as traveling and conversing with others. Other feedback modalities may be implemented during daily use with fewer obstructions, however audio feedback provides a best-case scenario for augmenting joint speed discrimination. Pitch discrimination within a standard piano range (27.5 Hz–4.2 kHz) is well below 1%36. By contrast, our results suggest visual speed discrimination of 20% or more, though previous research has suggested as low as 10%26. Although audio frequency was easily scaled to augment visual joint speed discrimination, other feedback modalities may not have the working range and psychophysical precision to significantly augment visual estimates.

Various methods have been proposed to restore physiologically-analogous sensations. Implanted peripheral nerve cuff electrodes can provide natural touch perception with stable sensory maps7, restoring a sense of grasping force which improves functional task performance8. Proprioception has also been restored through vibration-induced illusory kinesthesia, resulting in improved prosthesis movement control and agency over these movements9. Though these methods do not rely on sensory substitution to restore proprioception, they still must be comparable to the discriminatory power of vision to integrate reliably. Future work will develop a framework to computationally determine the minimum feedback range required for artificial sensory feedback to improve biological observations.

Conclusions

Lack of sensory feedback is a major limitation for modern prosthetic limbs. It is important to not only develop artificial sensory feedback for these limbs, but also to strive for feedback that is more than situationally beneficial. To this end, we investigated human visual perception of arm motion to determine its strengths and, particularly, weaknesses. Our work suggests that vision is most uncertain about joint speed observations, and that it is possible to improve these estimates with artificial sensory feedback. Because this feedback improves joint speed perception even in the presence of vision, we anticipate our proposed feedback system improving myoelectric prosthesis control in a variety of daily tasks, ultimately leading to an improved sense of independence and quality of life for upper-limb prosthesis users.