4.7 Article

Dynamic Active Constraints for Surgical Robots Using Vector-Field Inequalities

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ROBOTICS
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages 1166-1185

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TRO.2019.2920078

Keywords

Collision avoidance; dual quaternions; optimization-based control; virtual fixtures

Categories

Funding

  1. ImPACT Program of the Council for Science, Technology and Innovation (Cabinet Office, Government of Japan)
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [JP19K14935]
  3. Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT)
  4. CAPES
  5. CNPq
  6. FAPEMIG
  7. Project INCT (National Institute of Science and Technology) under Grant CNPq (Brazilian National Research Council) [465755/2014-3]
  8. FAPESP (Sao Paulo Research Foundation) [2014/50851-0]

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Robotic assistance allows surgeons to perform dexterous and tremor-free procedures, but robotic aid is still under-represented in procedures with constrained workspaces, such as deep brain neurosurgery and endonasal surgery. In these procedures, surgeons have restricted vision to areas near the surgical tooltips, which increases the risk of unexpected collisions between the shafts of the instruments and their surroundings. In this paper, our vector-field-inequalities method is extended to provide dynamic active-constraints to any number of robots and moving objects sharing the same workspace. The method is evaluated with experiments and simulations in which robot tools have to avoid collisions autonomously and in real-time, in a constrained endonasal surgical environment. Simulations show that with our method the combined trajectory error of two robotic systems is optimal. Experiments using a real robotic system show that the method can autonomously prevent collisions between the moving robots themselves and between the robots and the environment. Moreover, the framework is also successfully verified under teleoperation with tool-tissue interactions.

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