• DocumentCode
    3604272
  • Title

    An Energy Tank-Based Interactive Control Architecture for Autonomous and Teleoperated Robotic Surgery

  • Author

    Ferraguti, Federica ; Preda, Nicola ; Manurung, Auralius ; Bonfe, Marcello ; Lambercy, Olivier ; Gassert, Roger ; Muradore, Riccardo ; Fiorini, Paolo ; Secchi, Cristian

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Sci. & Methods for Eng., Univ. of Modena & Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy
  • Volume
    31
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    1073
  • Lastpage
    1088
  • Abstract
    Introducing some form of autonomy in robotic surgery is being considered by the medical community to better exploit the potential of robots in the operating room. However, significant technological steps have to occur before even the smallest autonomous task is ready to be presented to the regulatory authorities. In this paper, we address the initial steps of this process, in particular the development of control concepts satisfying the basic safety requirements of robotic surgery, i.e., providing the robot with the necessary dexterity and a stable and smooth behavior of the surgical tool. Two specific situations are considered: the automatic adaptation to changing tissue stiffness and the transition from autonomous to teleoperated mode. These situations replicate real-life cases when the surgeon adapts the stiffness of her/his arm to penetrate tissues of different consistency and when, due to an unexpected event, the surgeon has to take over the control of the surgical robot. To address the first case, we propose a passivity-based interactive control architecture that allows us to implement stable time-varying interactive behaviors. For the second case, we present a two-layered bilateral control architecture that ensures a stable behavior during the transition between autonomy and teleoperation and, after the switch, limits the effect of initial mismatch between master and slave poses. The proposed solutions are validated in the realistic surgical scenario developed within the EU-funded I-SUR project, using a surgical robot prototype specifically designed for the autonomous execution of surgical tasks like the insertion of needles into the human body.
  • Keywords
    biological tissues; medical robotics; mobile robots; surgery; telerobotics; EU-funded I-SUR project; autonomous robotic surgery; energy tank-based interactive control architecture; medical robots; surgical robot; teleoperated robotic surgery; time-varying interactive behaviors; tissue stiffness; two-layered bilateral control architecture; Admittance; Impedance; Medical robotics; Surgery; Switches; Energy tanks; interactive control; medical robots and systems; telerobotics;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1552-3098
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TRO.2015.2455791
  • Filename
    7180405