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The role of decreasing contact temperatures in the perception of wetness on the skin

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conference contribution
posted on 2013-03-15, 12:47 authored by Davide Filingeri, Bernard Redortier, Simon HodderSimon Hodder, George HavenithGeorge Havenith
Previous studies have indicated that the perception of wetness on the skin results from the integration of the somatosensory sub-modalities of touch and temperature [1]. However, how these inputs interact to evoke this synthetic perception is still unclear [2].

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Citation

FILINGERI, D. ... et al., 2013. The role of decreasing contact temperatures in the perception of wetness on the skin. IN: Cotter, J.D., Lucas, S.J.E. and Mundel, T. (eds.) Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Environmental Ergonomics, Queenstown, New Zealand, 11-15 February 2013, p. 174.

Publisher

International Society for Environmental Ergonomics © the authors

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

Publication date

2013

Notes

This is a conference paper. The Environmental Ergonomics website is at: http://www.environmental-ergonomics.org/

ISBN

9780473224387

Language

  • en

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