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A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback

During open surgery, a surgeon relies not only on the detailed view of the organ being operated upon and on being able to feel the fine details of this organ but also heavily relies on the combination of these two senses. In laparoscopic surgery, haptic feedback provides surgeons information on inte...

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Autores principales: Abad, Alexander Co, Reid, David, Ranasinghe, Anuradha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8914832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35271069
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22051924
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author Abad, Alexander Co
Reid, David
Ranasinghe, Anuradha
author_facet Abad, Alexander Co
Reid, David
Ranasinghe, Anuradha
author_sort Abad, Alexander Co
collection PubMed
description During open surgery, a surgeon relies not only on the detailed view of the organ being operated upon and on being able to feel the fine details of this organ but also heavily relies on the combination of these two senses. In laparoscopic surgery, haptic feedback provides surgeons information on interaction forces between instrument and tissue. There have been many studies to mimic the haptic feedback in laparoscopic-related telerobotics studies to date. However, cutaneous feedback is mostly restricted or limited in haptic feedback-based minimally invasive studies. We argue that fine-grained information is needed in laparoscopic surgeries to study the details of the instrument’s end and can convey via cutaneous feedback. We propose an exoskeleton haptic hand wearable which consists of five 4 × 4 miniaturized fingertip actuators, 80 in total, to convey cutaneous feedback. The wearable is described as modular, lightweight, Bluetooth, and WiFi-enabled, and has a maximum power consumption of 830 mW. Software is developed to demonstrate rapid tactile actuation of edges; this allows the user to feel the contours in cutaneous feedback. Moreover, to demonstrate the idea as an object displayed on a flat monitor, initial tests were carried out in 2D. In the second phase, the wearable exoskeleton glove is then further developed to feel 3D virtual objects by using a virtual reality (VR) headset demonstrated by a VR environment. Two-dimensional and 3D objects were tested by our novel untethered haptic hand wearable. Our results show that untethered humans understand actuation in cutaneous feedback just in a single tapping with 92.22% accuracy. Our wearable has an average latency of 46.5 ms, which is much less than the 600 ms tolerable delay acceptable by a surgeon in teleoperation. Therefore, we suggest our untethered hand wearable to enhance multimodal perception in minimally invasive surgeries to naturally feel the immediate environments of the instruments.
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spelling pubmed-89148322022-03-12 A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback Abad, Alexander Co Reid, David Ranasinghe, Anuradha Sensors (Basel) Article During open surgery, a surgeon relies not only on the detailed view of the organ being operated upon and on being able to feel the fine details of this organ but also heavily relies on the combination of these two senses. In laparoscopic surgery, haptic feedback provides surgeons information on interaction forces between instrument and tissue. There have been many studies to mimic the haptic feedback in laparoscopic-related telerobotics studies to date. However, cutaneous feedback is mostly restricted or limited in haptic feedback-based minimally invasive studies. We argue that fine-grained information is needed in laparoscopic surgeries to study the details of the instrument’s end and can convey via cutaneous feedback. We propose an exoskeleton haptic hand wearable which consists of five 4 × 4 miniaturized fingertip actuators, 80 in total, to convey cutaneous feedback. The wearable is described as modular, lightweight, Bluetooth, and WiFi-enabled, and has a maximum power consumption of 830 mW. Software is developed to demonstrate rapid tactile actuation of edges; this allows the user to feel the contours in cutaneous feedback. Moreover, to demonstrate the idea as an object displayed on a flat monitor, initial tests were carried out in 2D. In the second phase, the wearable exoskeleton glove is then further developed to feel 3D virtual objects by using a virtual reality (VR) headset demonstrated by a VR environment. Two-dimensional and 3D objects were tested by our novel untethered haptic hand wearable. Our results show that untethered humans understand actuation in cutaneous feedback just in a single tapping with 92.22% accuracy. Our wearable has an average latency of 46.5 ms, which is much less than the 600 ms tolerable delay acceptable by a surgeon in teleoperation. Therefore, we suggest our untethered hand wearable to enhance multimodal perception in minimally invasive surgeries to naturally feel the immediate environments of the instruments. MDPI 2022-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8914832/ /pubmed/35271069 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22051924 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Abad, Alexander Co
Reid, David
Ranasinghe, Anuradha
A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback
title A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback
title_full A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback
title_fullStr A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback
title_full_unstemmed A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback
title_short A Novel Untethered Hand Wearable with Fine-Grained Cutaneous Haptic Feedback
title_sort novel untethered hand wearable with fine-grained cutaneous haptic feedback
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8914832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35271069
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22051924
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