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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of delayed visual feedback on telerobotic surgery.

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TLDR
Compensation for visually delayed image perception occurs on several levels; initial adaptations include slower end-effector manipulation; late adaptive changes include a move-and-wait strategy.
Abstract
Telerobotic surgery is ideally suited for remote applications in which the instrument control console is stationed separately from the end-effectors at the patient’s bedside. However, if the distance between the console and the patient is great enough, a lag effect or latency between end-effector manipulation and the depicted image leads to alterations in movement patterns. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of visual delay on surgical task performance. At an endoscopic skill station, an analogue delay device was interposed between the surgical field and monitor to delay the transmission of visual information, thus mimicking the distance effect of data transmission. Three surgeons with similar laparoscopic experience participated in the laparoscopic knot tying portion of the study, and seven residents participated in the accuracy and dexterity tasks. The time to complete a single throw was recorded in seconds after adding consecutively increasingly time delay in 50 ms increments. Similar time delay increments were added for the accuracy and dexterity tasks, which involved passing a needle through two adjacent circles and passing a small cylinder through a larger one to reproduce two-handed coordination and spatial resolution. Data were presented as the median time to complete each task. For all three tasks, an incremental increase in time delay was associated with a significant (p < 0.001) increase in the time to complete the task. For dexterity, a statistically significant (p ≤ 0.05) delay was identified at 0.25 s of delay from control values without delay. A move-and-wait strategy was gradually adopted up to 0.4 s of visual delay. Compensation for visually delayed image perception occurs on several levels. Initial adaptations include slower end-effector manipulation; late adaptive changes include a move-and-wait strategy. Increased time to perform surgical maneuvers as well as diminished accuracy, diminished dexterity, and increasing fatigue represent additional performance encumbrances evoked by visual time delay. The nuances of both human and digital compensatory mechanisms for visual time delay must be defined and enhanced to maximize the potential for telerobotic surgical applications.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of the latency effects on surgical performance and the acceptable latency levels in telesurgery using the dV-Trainer(®) simulator.

TL;DR: The surgical performance deteriorates in an exponential way as the latency increases, andLatencies ≤200 ms are ideal for telesurgery; 300 ms is also suitable; 400–500 ms may be acceptable but are already tiring; and 600–700 msare difficult to deal with and only acceptable for low risk and simple procedures.
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Long-distance robotic telesurgery: a feasibility study for care in remote environments.

TL;DR: Basic telesurgical manoeuvres were conducted with signal delays to study the effects of radio-frequency interference on the response of the central nervous system to high-frequency radio signals.
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Delayed Visual Feedback Affects Both Manual Tracking and Grip Force Control When Transporting a Handheld Object

TL;DR: The idea that visual feedback of object motion can influence the predictive control of grip force even when the object is grasped is support by investigating the effect of delayed visual feedback during dextrous object manipulation.
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Miniature in vivo Robots for Remote and Harsh Environments

TL;DR: Experimental analysis of miniature fixed-base and mobile in vivo robots to support MIS surgery in remote and harsh environments and wireless imaging and task-assisting robots that can be placed inside the abdominal cavity during surgery are presented.
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An assistive decision-and-control architecture for force-sensitive hand-arm systems driven by human-machine interfaces

TL;DR: This paper proposes a decision-and-control architecture that provides support in object interaction and manipulation and thereby enhances the usability of the robotic system for use with HMIs and demonstrates how the semi-autonomous assistive behavior can help the user.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transatlantic robot-assisted telesurgery

TL;DR: It is shown that robot-assisted remote telesurgery can be safely carried out across transoceanic distances and will eliminate geographical constraints and make surgical expertise available throughout the world, improving patient treatment and surgical training.
Journal ArticleDOI

The da Vinci telerobotic surgical system: the virtual operative field and telepresence surgery.

TL;DR: The da Vinci telerobotic surgery system as discussed by the authors enables the surgeon to perform minimally invasive thoracic, cardiac, and abdominal procedures by controlling robotic arms that hold the stereoscopic video telescope and surgical instruments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emerging technologies for surgery in the 21st century.

TL;DR: The next generation of surgical systems will be more sophisticated and will permit surgeons to perform surgical procedures beyond the current limitations of human performance, especially at the microscale or on moving organs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new framework for vision-enabled and robotically assisted minimally invasive surgery.

TL;DR: The proposed choreographed scope maneuvering concept facilitates the surgeon's control of his/her visual feedback in a handless manner, reduces the risk to the patient from inappropriate scope movements by an assistant, and allows the operation to be performed faster and with greater ease.
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