I. Introduction
Whiskers, also known as vibrissae, are important tactile sensors for almost all mammals. Mammalian whiskers are arranged in bilateral arrays, with 25 or more whiskers emerging from each side of the animal's face [1]. Unlike insect antennae, which have mechanical and chemical sensors along their entire length, mammalian whiskers resemble hairs: sensing occurs only at the whisker base within a densely-innervated follicle [2]. Animals use their whiskers to help with rapid motion planning and navigation, to localize contact with objects, to distinguish object size, shape, texture, and orientation, and to sense fluid flow. Moreover, whisker-based sensing can distinguish between stimuli that occur simultaneously (e.g., contact can be distinguished from the inertial forces generated by the animal's own motion).