Evaluation of user-interfaces for controlling movements of virtual minimally invasive surgical instruments

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Abstract

Background: Recent tele-mentoring technologies for minimally invasive surgery (MIS) augments the operative field with movements of virtual surgical instruments as visual cues. The objective of this work is to assess different user-interfaces that effectively transfer mentor's hand gestures to the movements of virtual surgical instruments. Methods: A user study was conducted to assess three different user-interface devices (Oculus-Rift, SpaceMouse, Touch Haptic device) under various scenarios. The devices were integrated with a MIS tele-mentoring framework for control of both manual and robotic virtual surgical instruments. Results: The user study revealed that Oculus Rift is preferred during robotic scenarios, whereas the touch haptic device is more suitable during manual scenarios for tele-mentoring. Conclusion: A user-interface device in the form of a stylus controlled by fingers for pointing in 3D space is more suitable for manual MIS, whereas a user-interface that can be moved and oriented easily in 3D space by wrist motion is more suitable for robotic MIS.

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Shabir, D., Anbatawi, M., Padhan, J., Balakrishnan, S., Al-Ansari, A., Abinahed, J., … Navkar, N. V. (2022). Evaluation of user-interfaces for controlling movements of virtual minimally invasive surgical instruments. International Journal of Medical Robotics and Computer Assisted Surgery, 18(5). https://doi.org/10.1002/rcs.2414

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