• DocumentCode
    3291204
  • Title

    Attention-aware robotic laparoscope for human-robot cooperative surgery

  • Author

    Songpo Li ; Jiucai Zhang ; Linting Xue ; Kim, Fernando J. ; Xiaoli Zhang

  • Author_Institution
    Mech. Eng. Dept., Colorado Sch. of Mines, Golden, CO, USA
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    12-14 Dec. 2013
  • Firstpage
    792
  • Lastpage
    797
  • Abstract
    Current laparoscopic surgeries suffer from inconvenient, limited visualization due to the small incisions. It normally needs an assistant to hold and readjust a laparoscope to view the surgical set when performing procedures. This assistant can be either a human or a robotic laparoscope holder. However, at the current state, both of them only passively follow the control commands from the surgeon (The human assistant relies on the surgeon´s verbal communications and the robotic holder is controlled by the voice or joystick/buttons), whenever the laparoscope needs to be readjusted. The surgeon´s explicit intervention in laparoscope readjustment might bring extra mental and physical burdens to him/her. In this paper, the work of granting attention-awareness to a robotic laparoscope holder is presented. The robot can actively observe the surgeon´s viewing attention by tracking the surgeon´s eye movements and automatically adjust the laparoscope´s view correspondingly. Our experimental results demonstrated that this system effectively released the surgeon from the intervention of the laparoscope, which could eliminate the visualization barriers of laparoscopic surgeries, reduce the learning curve in laparoscopic surgeries, and reduce the operation time and cost.
  • Keywords
    dexterous manipulators; human-robot interaction; medical robotics; surgery; attention-aware robotic laparoscope; automatic laparoscope view adjustment; buttons; control commands; human assistant; human-robot cooperative surgery; joysticks; laparoscope intervention; laparoscopic surgeries; laparoscopic surgery visualization barriers; learning curve reduction; mental burdens; operation cost reduction; operation time reduction; physical burdens; robotic laparoscope holder; surgeon explicit intervention; surgeon eye movement tracking; surgeon verbal communications; surgeon viewing attention; voice control; Calibration; Laparoscopes; Minimally invasive surgery; Robot kinematics; Tracking;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Robotics and Biomimetics (ROBIO), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Shenzhen
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ROBIO.2013.6739559
  • Filename
    6739559