Title :
Haptics for Multi-fingered Palpation
Author :
Min Li ; Luo, Sheng ; Seneviratne, Lakmal D. ; Nanayakkara, T. ; Althoefer, Kaspar ; Dasgupta, Parthasarathi
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf., King´s Coll. London, London, UK
Abstract :
During open surgery, surgeons can perceive the locations of tumors inside soft-tissue organs using their fingers. Palpating an organ, surgeons acquire distributed pressure (tactile) information that can be interpreted as stiffness distribution across the organ -an important aid in detecting buried tumors in otherwise healthy tissue. Previous research has focused on haptic systems to feedback the tactile sensation experienced during palpation to the surgeon during minimally invasive. However, the control complexity and high cost of tactile actuators limits its current application. This paper describes a pneumatic multi-fingered haptic feedback system for robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery. It simulates soft tissue stiffness by changing the pressure of an air balloon and recreates the deformation of fingers as experienced during palpation. The pneumatic haptic feedback actuator is validated by using finite element analysis. The results prove that the interaction stress between the fingertip and the soft tissue as well as the deformation of fingertips during palpation can be recreated by using our pneumatic multi-fingered haptic feedback method.
Keywords :
finite element analysis; haptic interfaces; medical robotics; surgery; tissue engineering; tumours; air balloon; buried tumors detection; control complexity; distributed pressure information; fingertip; finite element analysis; haptic systems; healthy tissue; interaction stress; multifingered palpation; open surgery; pneumatic haptic feedback actuator; pneumatic multifingered haptic feedback system; robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery; soft tissue organs; soft tissue stiffness; stiffness distribution; surgeons; tactile actuators; tactile information; tactile sensation; Actuators; Biological tissues; Fingers; Haptic interfaces; Strain; Stress; Tumors; finite element analysis; haptic feedback; multi-fingered palpation; tumor identification;
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Manchester
DOI :
10.1109/SMC.2013.713