|
Of, or relating to, the sense of touch or tactile sensations. This is a good example of a relatively unusual scientific word that in recent years has become more widely known through a specific use. It appeared near the end of the nineteenth century, at first as a medical term. It was coined from the Greek haptikos, able to sense or touch, which derives from the verb haptein, to fasten. It’s closely related to the rare English prefix hapto–, as in haptotropism for the reflex action in plants such as honeysuckle or bindweed that causes them to twist around objects they touch. At one time, people most often came across the word in connection with hard contact lenses, which were described as haptic because they were moulded exactly to fit the shape of the eyeball. In the past decade or so, haptic has become more widely used in the world of immersive virtual-reality computer systems by those who design techniques and tools that reproduce the sense of touch. Joysticks and the like are now being designed so that they feed tactile information back to the user about the way the system is functioning. An object that has been visualised on a computer may soon be capable of being felt as well as seen. Such tools are commonly known in the business as haptic devices. SHARE THIS ARTICLE |
Page created 26 Aug 2000
News
This site has been nominated for the Lsoft Choice Awards. Please visit the awards site and vote for World Wide Words.
Visit our companion site, Affixes, describing the building blocks of English: 1,250 entries plus 10,000 examples.
Most visited pages
Random selections
|