Vibrotactile feedback is when something buzzes or vibrates to let you know what's happening.
Imagine you're playing with a toy that makes your wrist feel like it’s being gently tapped by a tiny robot every time you press a button. That tapping, vibrotactile feedback, is how the toy tells you, “You did something right!”
Like a Rumble in Your Hand
A Helper That Talks Through Touch
Sometimes, you can’t see what's happening, but you can feel it. Like when you're playing a video game with special gloves that vibrate to tell you if you’re hitting the right spot or getting hit by an enemy, all through touch!
It’s like having a secret message only your hand can read. Cool, right?
Examples
- A game controller vibrating when you get hit in a video game
- A smartwatch buzzing to let you know you received a message
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See also
- What is closed-loop?
- What is Two-way feedback?
- What are media consumption patterns?
- What are platform mechanics?
- What are adaptive interfaces?