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A display you can both see and feel — black and green digital device

A display you can both see and feelCEFR B1

2 Dec 2025

Adapted from Debra Herrick - UC Santa Barbara, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by eMotion Tech, Unsplash

AI-assisted adaptation of the original article, simplified for language learners.

Researchers at the University of California, Santa Barbara developed a display that produces images people can both see and feel. The work, led by PhD candidate Max Linnander in professor Yon Visell’s RE Touch Lab, appears in the journal Science Robotics. The project began after Visell posed a challenge when Linnander arrived in late September 2021. The team spent about a year on theory and simulations, then moved to prototypes. In December 2022 Linnander demonstrated a simple functioning prototype: a single pixel activated by brief flashes from a small diode laser.

The displays use arrays of millimetre-sized optotactile pixels on thin surfaces. Each pixel contains an air-filled cavity and a suspended thin graphite film. The film absorbs light, heating the trapped air; the air expands and pushes the top surface outward by as much as one millimetre. By scanning a light beam across many pixels in sequence, the system creates dynamic graphics that are both visible and tactile. Because the laser provides illumination and power, the surfaces need no embedded wiring or electronics.

User tests showed people could report the location of single illuminated pixels with millimetre precision, perceive moving graphics, and distinguish spatial and temporal patterns. The team demonstrated devices with more than 1,500 independently addressable pixels. Possible uses include high-definition visual-haptic touchscreens, electronic books with tangible illustrations, and architectural surfaces for mixed reality.

Difficult words

  • prototypefirst working model used to test ideas
    prototypes
  • pixelsmallest element of a digital image
    pixels
  • cavityempty space inside a small object or structure
  • suspendedto hang or hold something in place
  • absorbsto take in energy or liquid
  • tactilerelated to the sense of touch
  • illuminationlight that makes things visible

Tip: hover, focus or tap highlighted words in the article to see quick definitions while you read or listen.

Discussion questions

  • How could a display you can both see and feel change the way people read books or use touchscreens?
  • What practical problems might designers face when building these displays for everyday devices?
  • Which of the possible uses mentioned in the article would you find most useful and why?

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