@inproceedings{Pfeiffer2015d,
	abstract = {Haptic feedback allows leveraging other faculties such as proprioception instead of using the visual sense, which is often overloaded with traditional UIs. However, most haptic technologies have been away from the current trend in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) which is miniaturization (eg, mobile, wearable). Therefore haptic techniques, such as force feedback, tend to stay inside labs. In fact, most haptic devices resist miniaturization because they require physical motors and mechanics which do not scale down easily. Researchers have proposed miniaturizing and simplifying haptic devices by using electrical-muscle stimulation as to actuate the muscles directly, rather than actuating through mechanics. Electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) uses a small current to elicit action on the motor fibers/nerves, causing an involuntary contraction on the user’s body.},
	title = {Let your body move: electrical muscle stimuli as haptics},
	author = {Lopes, Pedro and Pfeiffer, Max and Rohs, Michael and Baudisch, Patrick},
	booktitle = {Let your body move - a tutorial on electrical muscle stimuli as haptics 2015},
	location = {Evanston, Illinois, USA},
	year = {2015},
	papertype = {workshoppaper}
}