Modeling, Planning, and Control for Robot-Assisted Medical Interventions

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Event details

Date 17.10.2013
Hour 14:15
Speaker Prof. Allison Okamura, Stanford University
Bio: Allison M. Okamura received the BS degree from the University of California at Berkeley in 1994, and the MS and PhD degrees from Stanford University in 1996 and 2000, respectively, all in mechanical engineering. She is currently an Associate Professor in the mechanical engineering department at Stanford University. She was previously Professor and Vice Chair of mechanical engineering at Johns Hopkins University. She has been an associate editor of the IEEE Transactions on Haptics, an editor of the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation Conference Editorial Board, and co-chair of the IEEE Haptics Symposium. Her awards include the 2009 IEEE Technical Committee on Haptics Early Career Award, the 2005 IEEE Robotics and Automation Society Early Academic Career Award, and the 2004 NSF CAREER Award. She is an IEEE Fellow. Her academic interests include haptics, teleoperation,virtual environments and simulators, medical robotics, neuromechanics and rehabilitation, prosthetics, and engineering education. Outside academia, she enjoys spending time with her husband and two children, running, and playing ice hockey. For more information about her research, please see the Collaborative Haptics and Robotics in Medicine (CHARM) Laboratory website.

Talk hosted by NCCR Robotics
Location
Category Conferences - Seminars
Many medical interventions today are qualitatively and quantitatively limited by human physical and cognitive capabilities. This talk will discuss several robot-assisted intervention techniques that will extend humans’ ability to carry out interventions more accurately and less invasively. First, I will discuss the development of minimally invasive systems that deliver therapy by steering needles throughdeformable tissue and around internal obstacles to reach specified targets.Second, I will review recent results in haptic (touch) feedback for robot-assisted teleoperated surgery, in particular the mapping and display of tissue mechanical properties. Finally, I will describe recent work using dynamic models of the body to drive novel rehabilitation strategies. All ofthese systems incorporate one or more key elements of robotic interventions:
  1. quantitative descriptions of patient state,
  2. the use of models to plan interventions,
  3. the design of devices and control systems that connect information to physical action, and
  4. the inclusion of human input in a natural way.

Practical information

  • General public
  • Free

Organizer

  • NCCR Robotics

Contact

  • Tania Gonin

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