Title
Pilot study on effectiveness of simulation for surgical robot design using manipulability.
Abstract
Medical technology has advanced with the introduction of robot technology, which facilitates some traditional medical treatments that previously were very difficult. However, at present, surgical robots are used in limited medical domains because these robots are designed using only data obtained from adult patients and are not suitable for targets having different properties, such as children. Therefore, surgical robots are required to perform specific functions for each clinical case. In addition, the robots must exhibit sufficiently high movability and operability for each case. In the present study, we focused on evaluation of the mechanism and configuration of a surgical robot by a simulation based on movability and operability during an operation. We previously proposed the development of a simulator system that reproduces the conditions of a robot and a target in a virtual patient body to evaluate the operability of the surgeon during an operation. In the present paper, we describe a simple experiment to verify the condition of the surgical assisting robot during an operation. In this experiment, the operation imitating suturing motion was carried out in a virtual workspace, and the surgical robot was evaluated based on manipulability as an indicator of movability. As the result, it was confirmed that the robot was controlled with low manipulability of the left side manipulator during the suturing. This simulation system can verify the less movable condition of a robot before developing an actual robot. Our results show the effectiveness of this proposed simulation system.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1109/IEMBS.2011.6091124
EMBC
Keywords
Field
DocType
medical robotics,virtual patient body,biomechanics,simulator system,virtual reality,surgical robot design,biomedical engineering,surgical assisting robot,mechanism evaluation,suturing motion,manipulators,medical technology,virtual workspace,adult patient,manipulability,surgery,robot kinematics
Robot control,Virtual reality,Simulation,Computer science,Robot design,Virtual patient,Robot kinematics,Control engineering,Operability,Robot,Mobile robot
Conference
Volume
ISSN
ISBN
2011
1557-170X
978-1-4244-4122-8
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.43
3
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Kazuya Kawamura14912.57
Hiroto Seno210.43
Yo Kobayashi318548.42
Masakatsu G. Fujie429785.17