Towards a robotic minimally invasive surgery assessment and augmentation platform for visual-haptic acuity development

S. Machaca, Jeremy D. Brown
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Abstract

Up to half of the technical errors made by surgical trainees result from improper tool forces on tissue [1]. This skill inadequacy is exacerbated in robotic min- imally invasive surgery (RMIS) due to the perpetual technical barriers prohibiting robust haptic (touch) sen- sations in clinical RMIS systems. Expert RMIS surgeons have developed a unique skill, termed visual-haptic acuity, that enables them to visually estimate the absent haptic sensations [2]. RMIS experts have developed this visual-haptic acuity through years of repeated surgi- cal practice, on real patient tissue. For current RMIS trainees, limitations on working hours and caseloads severely constrain practice with real patient tissue [3]. Given that skill gained in virtual reality simulation does not always transfer to the real world [4], there is a critical need for a focus on visual-haptic acuity development. Previous research has shown that supplemental hap- tic feedback provided during simulation-based RMIS training helps surgical trainees to reduce their applied forces when completing RMIS training tasks [5], and that this effect is sustained even when haptic feedback is removed [6]. In addition, supplemental haptic feedback has demonstrated the potential to help RMIS trainees increase accuracy (reduce applied forces) while also increasing speed (reducing task completion time) during RMIS training [7]. Unfortunately, the benefits of sup- plemental haptic feedback have not been demonstrated beyond basic simulated training environments. Addition- ally, we lack validated objective methods for specifically assessing an RMIS trainee’s ability to visually estimate haptic sensations when operating on real patient tissue. In light of this need, we are developing a modular data acquisition and multimodality haptic feedback system (as shown in Figure 1) to catalyze visual-haptic acuity development for novice RMIS trainees.
一个机器人微创手术评估和增强平台的视觉-触觉敏锐度发展
多达一半的外科培训生的技术错误是由于不适当的工具力对组织bbb造成的。这种技能的不足在机器人微创手术(RMIS)中加剧,因为在临床RMIS系统中,永久的技术障碍禁止了强大的触觉(触摸)感觉。专家RMIS外科医生已经开发了一种独特的技能,称为视觉-触觉灵敏度,使他们能够视觉上估计缺失的触觉。RMIS专家通过多年的反复手术实践,在真实的患者组织上开发了这种视觉触觉敏锐度。对于目前的RMIS受训者来说,工作时间和病例量的限制严重限制了与真实患者组织bb0的实践。考虑到在虚拟现实模拟中获得的技能并不总是能转移到现实世界中,因此迫切需要关注视觉-触觉敏度的发展。先前的研究表明,在基于模拟的RMIS训练中提供补充的触觉反馈有助于外科受训者在完成RMIS训练任务时减少施加的力量b[5],并且即使移除触觉反馈b[6],这种效果也会持续下去。此外,补充触觉反馈已经证明有潜力帮助RMIS学员提高准确性(减少施加的力量),同时也提高速度(减少任务完成时间)在RMIS培训[7]。不幸的是,除了基本的模拟训练环境之外,补充触觉反馈的好处还没有得到证实。此外,我们缺乏经过验证的客观方法来专门评估RMIS受训者在对真实患者组织进行手术时视觉估计触觉的能力。鉴于这一需求,我们正在开发一种模块化数据采集和多模态触觉反馈系统(如图1所示),以促进RMIS新手的视触觉敏度发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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