Abstract
Leveraging techniques pioneered by the SLAM community, we present a new filtering approach called simultaneous compliance and registration estimation or CARE. CARE is like SLAM in that it simultaneously determines the pose of a surgical robot while creating a map, but in this case, the map is a compliance map associated with a preoperative model of an organ as opposed to just positional information like landmark locations. The problem assumes that the robot is forcefully contacting and deforming the environment. This palpation has a dual purpose: 1) it provides the necessary geometric information to align or register the robot to a priori models, and 2) with palpation at varying forces, the stiffness/compliance of the environment can be computed. By allowing the robot to palpate its environment with varying forces, we create a force balanced spring model within a Kalman filter framework to estimate both tissue and robot position. The probabilistic framework allows for information fusion and computational efficiency. The algorithm is experimentally evaluated using a continuum robot interacting with two bench-top flexible structures.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Sanan, S., Tully, S., Bajo, A., Simaan, N., & Choset, H. (2014). Simultaneous Compliance and Registration Estimation for Robotic Surgery. In Robotics: Science and Systems. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. https://doi.org/10.15607/RSS.2014.X.051
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