Piezoelectric sensor, Tactile sensor, Bionic sensor, Subcutaneous vibration sensing
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,"/> Piezoelectric sensor, Tactile sensor, Bionic sensor, Subcutaneous vibration sensing,"/> Tactile Sensor for Subcutaneous Vocal Organ Vibrations Inspired by Otolith Cilia

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Journal of Bionic Engineering ›› 2026, Vol. 23 ›› Issue (1): 302-310.doi: 10.1007/s42235-025-00811-8

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Tactile Sensor for Subcutaneous Vocal Organ Vibrations Inspired by Otolith Cilia

Chang Ge1   

  1. 1 School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation, BeihangUniversity, Beijing 100191, China
  • Online:2026-02-15 Published:2026-03-17
  • Contact: Chang Ge1 E-mail:cge12@buaa.edu.cn
  • About author:Chang Ge1

Abstract: Tactile sensing of subcutaneous organ vibrations provides a promising route toward human–machine interfaces and wearable diagnostics, particularly for voice rehabilitation and silent-speech communication. Here, we present a bioinspiredpiezoelectric vibration sensor that mimics the graded stiffness and stress-based transduction mechanism of otolithic ciliain the human vestibular system. The device consists of a trapezoidal cantilever array with tip inertial masses, fabricatedthrough a hybrid stereolithography 3D printing and laser micromachining process for rapid prototyping without cleanroomfacilities. Finite-element modeling and experimental measurements demonstrate a fundamental resonance near 1.2 kHz,a 5% flat-bandwidth of 350 Hz, and an in-band charge sensitivity of 3.17 pC/g. A wearable proof-of-concept test furtherverifies the sensor’s ability to reproducibly distinguish phoneme-specific vibration patterns in both time and frequencydomains. This work establishes a foundation for bioinspired tactile sensing front-ends in wearable voice interfaces andother intelligent diagnostic systems integrated with machine-learning algorithms.

Key words: Piezoelectric sensor, Tactile sensor, Bionic sensor, Subcutaneous vibration sensing')">Piezoelectric sensor, Tactile sensor, Bionic sensor, Subcutaneous vibration sensing