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Augmentation of haptic feedback for teleoperated robotic surgery. | LitMetric

Augmentation of haptic feedback for teleoperated robotic surgery.

Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg

Chair of Medical Engineering, Helmholtz Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Pauwelsstraße 20, 52074, Aachen, Germany.

Published: March 2020

Purpose: A frequently mentioned lack of teleoperated surgical robots is the lack of haptic feedback. Haptics are not only able to mirror force information from the situs, but also to provide spatial guidance according to a surgical plan. However, superposition of the two haptic information can lead to overlapping and masking of the feedback and guidance forces. This study investigates different approaches toward a combination of both information and investigates effects on system usability.

Methods: Preliminary studies are conducted to define parameters for two main experiments. The two main experiments constitute simulated surgical interventions where haptic guidance as well as haptic feedback provide information for the surgeon. The first main experiment considers drilling for pedicle screw placements, while the second main experiment refers to three-dimensional milling tasks such as during partial knee replacements or craniectomies. For both experiments, different guidance modes in combination with haptic feedback are evaluated regarding effectiveness (e.g., distance to target depth), efficiency and user satisfaction (e.g., detectability of discrepancies in case of technical guidance error).

Results: Regarding pedicle screw placements a combination of a peripheral visual signal and a vibration constitutes a good compromise regarding distance to target depth and detectability of discrepancies. For milling tasks, trajectory guidance is able to improve efficiency and user satisfaction (e.g., perceived workload), while boundary constraints improve effectiveness. If, assistance cannot be offered in all degrees of freedom (e.g., craniectomies), a visual substitution of the haptic force feedback shows the best results, though participants prefer using haptic force feedback.

Conclusion: Our results suggest that in case haptic feedback and haptic assistance are combined appropriately, benefits of both haptic modalities can be exploited. Thereby, capabilities of the human-machine system are improved compared to usage of exclusively one of the haptic information.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7036061PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11548-020-02118-xDOI Listing

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