Bone conduction headphones for force feedback in robotic surgery Conference Paper


Authors: Mikic, M.; Francis, P.; Looi, T.; Gerstle, J. T.; Drake, J.
Title: Bone conduction headphones for force feedback in robotic surgery
Conference Title: 41st Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC)
Abstract: Bone conduction headphones (Fig. 1) offer the unique ability to provide auditory information to the user without obstructing external sounds. We apply this technology to robotic surgery to provide the surgeon with force feedback information with minimal distraction. The device is evaluated by pairing it with a force sensor that is attached to a suture pad. Four participants were tasked to complete 25 sutures on the suture pad while either receiving no feedback or audio, visual, or combined feedback that represents the magnitude of their applied force. Trials performed with bone conducting headphones had noticeable improvements compared to previous trials without feedback, while the most noticeable improvements were observed for cases with both visual and auditory feedback. Auditory feedback may have an important role in a robotic surgery setting and bone conduction headphones may enable this form of feedback with minimal distraction.
Keywords: system
Journal Title IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. Conference Proceedings
Volume: 2019
Conference Dates: 2019 Jul 23-27
Conference Location: Berlin, Germany
ISBN: 1557-170X
Publisher: IEEE  
Date Published: 2019-01-01
Start Page: 7128
End Page: 7133
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000557295307131
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 31947479
DOI: 10.1109/embc.2019.8857519
Notes: Proceedings Paper -- Source: Wos
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  1. Justin Theodore Gerstle
    24 Gerstle