• DocumentCode
    1992183
  • Title

    Current status of the Varioscope AR, a head-mounted operating microscope for computer-aided surgery

  • Author

    Figl, M. ; Birkfellner, W. ; Hummel, J. ; Hanel, R. ; Homolka, P. ; Watzinger, F. ; Wanshit, F. ; Ewers, R. ; Bergmann, H.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Biomed. Eng. & Phys., Vienna Univ., Austria
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    2001
  • Firstpage
    20
  • Lastpage
    29
  • Abstract
    Computer-aided surgery (CAS), the intraoperative application of biomedical visualization techniques, appears to be one of the most promising fields of application for augmented reality (AR), the display of additional computer generated graphics over a real-world scene. Typically a device such as a head-mounted display (HMD) is used for AR. However considerable technical problems connected with AR have limited the intraoperative application of HMDs up to now. One of the difficulties in using HMDs is the requirement for a common optical focal plane for both the real-world scene and the computer generated image, and acceptance of the HMD by the user in a surgical environment. In order to increase the clinical acceptance of AR, we have adapted the Varioscope (Life Optics, Vienna), a miniature, cost-effective head-mounted operating microscope, for AR. In this work, we present the basic design of the modified HMD, and the method and results of an extensive laboratory study for photogrammetric calibration of the Varioscope´s computer displays to a real-world scene. In a series of sixteen calibrations with varying zoom factors and object distances, mean calibration error was found to be 1.24±0.38 pixels or 0.12±0.05 mm for a 640×480 display. Maximum error accounted for 3.33±1.04 pixels or 0.33±0.12 mm. The location of a position measurement probe of an optical tracking system was transformed to the display with an error of less than I mm in the real world in 56% of all cases. For the remaining cases, error was below 2 mm. We conclude that the accuracy achieved in our experiments is sufficient for a wide range of CAS applications
  • Keywords
    augmented reality; calibration; data visualisation; helmet mounted displays; medical image processing; optical tracking; augmented reality; biomedical visualization; computer generated graphics; computer-aided surgery; head-mounted display; head-mounted operating microscope; intraoperative application; photogrammetric calibration; position measurement; real-world scene; varioscope augmented reality; Application software; Biomedical computing; Biomedical optical imaging; Calibration; Computer displays; Computer errors; Content addressable storage; Layout; Surgery; Visualization;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Augmented Reality, 2001. Proceedings. IEEE and ACM International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    New York, NY
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-1375-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ISAR.2001.970512
  • Filename
    970512