Skip to content
  •   Thursday, June 25, 2026
  • Contacts
  • About us
  • Opt-out preferences
  • Privacy Statement
  • Terms and Conditions
Ideas and Discoveries

Ideas and Discoveries

IS A MAGAZINE COVERING SCIENCE, WITH A HEAVY INTEREST IN SOCIAL SCIENCE

  • Life
    • Plants
    • Animals
    • Neuroscience
    • Genetics
  • Earth
    • Ecosystems
    • Climate
    • Environment
    • Oceans
  • Humans
    • Anthropology
    • Archaeology
    • Health & Medicine
    • Psychology
  • Physics
    • Materials Science
    • Particle Physics
    • Quantum Physics
  • Space
    • Astronomy
    • Cosmology
    • Planetary Science
  • Technology
  • Home
  • Life
  • Neuroscience
  • Rethinking Vibration as an Emotional Language
Featured Neuroscience Psychology

Rethinking Vibration as an Emotional Language

2 months ago
ID

Summary: A new study challenges the traditional view of mobile device vibration as a simple “alert.” The research introduces a shift toward “tactons”, structured vibration patterns designed to convey complex emotions, support social connection, and represent personal memories.

By treating vibration as an expressive medium rather than a technical notification, the research demonstrates how haptic feedback can mimic a “reassuring touch” for public speakers or provide essential environmental cues for the blind and low-vision community.

Key Facts

  • Expressive Tactons: The research moves beyond simple on/off signals to create “tactons” that participants associated with nuanced emotional states like reassurance, encouragement, and tension.
  • Social Support via Touch: In remote public speaking tests, vibrotactile feedback acted as a “digital hand on the shoulder,” helping speakers manage anxiety and maintain focus without visual or auditory distractions.
  • Tactile Memories: Participants were able to translate abstract personal memories into specific vibration patterns, proving that touch can serve as a repository for subjective experiences.
  • Inclusive Design: Collaborating with blind and low-vision users, the study developed a tactile “language” for navigating environments, offering a discrete alternative to audio-based GPS or screen readers.

Source: Estonia Research Council

In her doctoral thesis, Yulia Sion investigates how vibration, commonly used in mobile devices as simple alerts, can become a meaningful channel for communication that conveys emotions, supports social connection, and represents personal experiences.

The research explores how “tactons,” structured vibration patterns, can be designed to carry rich and interpretable meaning. Using a Research through Design approach, the work combines experimental studies, wearable prototypes, and co-design with users.

Touch can function as a primary medium for communication, especially when other senses are overloaded. Credit: Neuroscience News

Across multiple contexts, including public speaking, accessibility for blind and low vision people, and the representation of personal memories, the research develops new methods for designing expressive vibrotactile feedback and examines how people interpret it in practice.

The meaning of vibration in digital communication

The findings show that vibration can communicate more than simple signals such as alerts or notifications. Participants associated specific vibration patterns with emotional qualities such as reassurance, encouragement, and tension. In studies on remote public speaking, vibrotactile feedback was interpreted as a form of social support, similar to a reassuring touch, helping participants manage anxiety and maintain focus.

In another study, participants translated elements of their personal memories into tactile patterns, demonstrating how touch can represent abstract and subjective experiences. Co-design with blind and low vision participants resulted in a set of tactile cues for perceiving environmental information, highlighting the potential of vibration as an alternative to sound-based navigation.

A key contribution of the thesis is a novel co-design framework for creating expressive tactons. Rather than treating vibration as a purely technical parameter, this approach supports designers in translating emotional, experiential, and contextual meanings into tactile form. The research also introduces practical tools, including wearable vibrotactile devices and a haptic design system, which can support future applications.

Helping designers create meaning

The work expands the role of touch in digital interaction. While most technologies rely on visual and auditory channels, this research demonstrates that touch can function as a primary medium for communication, particularly in situations where other senses are limited or overloaded. The findings are relevant for accessibility, remote communication, wellbeing technologies, and multisensory storytelling.

By rethinking vibration as a carrier of meaning rather than a simple signal, the thesis extends existing approaches and advances the design of more inclusive and emotionally aware touch technologies.

Key Questions Answered:

Q: Can a vibration really make you feel “reassured”?

A: Yes. Sion’s research found that when vibrations are structured—varying in rhythm, intensity, and duration, people instinctively map social and emotional meanings onto them. A gentle, rhythmic pulse can feel like a supportive pat on the back, while a sharp, irregular pattern might signal urgency or tension.

Q: Why use vibration when we already have sound and screens?

A: Screens and speakers often become “overloaded.” Vibration offers a private, “eyes-free” channel of communication that works in loud environments or sensitive social situations where checking a phone or wearing headphones would be intrusive.

Q: How do you “design” a memory into a vibration?

A: Through a new co-design framework, participants translated the tempo and intensity of their memories into haptic patterns. For example, a calm memory might be a slow, fading wave, while an exciting one might be a rapid, high-frequency “buzz” that mimics a racing heart.

Editorial Notes:

  • This article was edited by a Neuroscience News editor.
  • Journal paper reviewed in full.
  • Additional context added by our staff.

About this neurotech research news

Author: Mikk Viilukas
Source: 
Estonian Research Council
Contact: Mikk Viilukas – Estonian Research Council
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Tags: emotion, Emotional Technology, estonia research council, haptic feedback, human computer interaction, neuroscience, Neurotech, Psychology, Tactons, vibrations, Vibrotactile Communication

Post navigation

Apple TV’s new ‘Silo’ S3 teaser digs deep into the past for a post-apocalyptic origin story (video)
Best space prison movies | Space

Latest post

  • Archaeologists discover ceremonial Tartessian bronze chariot
  • The military traded its flu vaccine mandate for ‘medical freedom’ – an outbreak quickly followed
  • NASA looks for the origins of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS photo of the day for June 24, 2026
  • A child psychologist explains how to empower kids to make safer choices
  • Sofia Etzold | The slow fade of forest vitality — What decades of monitoring reveal  – Functional Ecologists

Addiction Aging AI Anxiety Artificial Intelligence Automotive Biomedical technology brain development brain research business Cardiology climate Computer Sciences Conditions Depression developmental neuroscience Diseases emotion Energy & Green Tech Engineering Genetics health Health informatics Hi Tech & Innovation Internet Machine Learning Machine learning & AI Medical economics Medications mental health neurobiology neurodevelopment Neurology neuroscience Obstetrics & gynaecology Oncology & Cancer Pediatrics Psychology Psychology & Psychiatry Robotics science Security social neuroscience stress Syndromes

Related posts

Brain Cancer Featured Neurology Neuroscience

GABA Immune Pathway Drives Female Brain Cancer Growth

2 days ago
ID
brain research Featured heart rate neurobiology Neuroscience pnas nexus Psychology social interactions social neuroscience

Heart Rates Align in Real-World Social Interactions

2 days ago
ID
brain research Featured Genetics Lieber Institute for Brain Development mental health neurobiology Neuroscience Psychology Schizophrenia

Network Mapping Uncovers 641 Hidden Schizophrenia Risk Genes

3 days ago
ID
Featured Neurology Neuroscience

Losing Smell Triggers Severe Clinical Depression

4 days ago
ID

Latest posts

Archaeology Humans

Archaeologists discover ceremonial Tartessian bronze chariot

14 hours ago
ID
Anthropology Humans

The military traded its flu vaccine mandate for ‘medical freedom’ – an outbreak quickly followed

15 hours ago
ID
Astronomy

NASA looks for the origins of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS photo of the day for June 24, 2026

21 hours ago
ID
Anthropology Humans

A child psychologist explains how to empower kids to make safer choices

23 hours ago
ID

Categories

  • Life
  • Earth
  • Humans
  • Space
  • Physics

ID

  • Contacts
  • About us
  • Opt-out preferences
  • Privacy Statement
  • Terms and Conditions

NEW

Archaeology Humans

Archaeologists discover ceremonial Tartessian bronze chariot

Anthropology Humans

The military traded its flu vaccine mandate for ‘medical freedom’ – an outbreak quickly followed

We are the last online version of ID Ideas and Discoveries
[email protected]

Copyright © 2025. All rights reserved | Theme by MantraBrain
Ideas and Discoveries
Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}