Human-centered transparency of grasping via a robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery system
Amit Milstein, Tzvi Ganel, Sigal Berman, Ilana Nisky
- Year
- 2017
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
We investigate grasping of rigid objects in unilateral robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery (RAMIS) in this paper. We define a human-centered transparency that quantifies natural action and perception in RAMIS. We demonstrate this human-centered transparency analysis for different values of gripper scaling - the scaling between the grasp aperture of the surgeon-side manipulator and the aperture of the surgical instrument grasper. Thirty-one participants performed teleoperated grasping and perceptual assessment of rigid objects in one of three gripper scaling conditions (fine, normal, and quick, trading off precision and responsiveness). Psychophysical analysis of the variability of maximal grasping aperture during prehension and of the reported size of the object revealed that in normal and quick (but not in the fine) gripper scaling conditions, teleoperated grasping with our system was similar to natural grasping, and therefore, human-centered transparent. We anticipate that using motor control and psychophysics for human-centered optimizing of teleoperation control will eventually improve the usability of RAMIS.
Keywords
Related papers
Robotics in Plastic Surgery
Vijay Kumar, Sandhya Pandey
Clinical Journal of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery · 2026
SurfSurg6D: Geometry Consistent Dense Correspondence for Textureless Surgical Instrument Pose Estimation
Daiyun Shen, Shuojue Yang, Chang Han Low +4 more
2026
EndoGSim: Physics-Aware 4D Dynamic Endoscopic Scene Simulations via MLLM-Guided Gaussian Splatting
Changjing Liu, Yiming Huang, Long Bai +2 more
2026
First Reported Case Using ANSUR for Local Resection of the Stomach.
Sato R, Sagawa H, Hayashi S +10 more
Asian journal of endoscopic surgery · 2026