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CiiS Lab
Johns Hopkins University
112 Hackerman Hall
3400 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218
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Lab Director
Russell Taylor
127 Hackerman Hall
rht@jhu.edu
Last updated: 12th May 2013
Enter a short narrative description here
The following pictures depict the 'snake' as it is from previous work(s).
The main and static aim of our project is to interface the APL Snake end effector to the LARS. The APL Snake is a surgical manipulator intended to be used in hip osteolysis removal surgery. However, since development its potential has been realized and it is being constantly upgraded to be a self sustained surgical tool. Initially, it was controlled through mouse and keyboard only. Intuitive control interface for the manipulator, has since, been designed and integrated with the snake using PHANTOM® Premium haptic controller. The desire to further reduce human intervention for its operation and make the setup fully automated, still remains. The Laparoscopic - Assisted Robot System (LARS) is an ideal platform for achieving the same due to its mobility, dexterity, and versatility of use with various end-effectors. End point control of the Snake is to be achieved following the inverse kinematics of LARS with the manipulator. The demonstration of the level of achievement of the same is planned to be shown on cardboard, solid model(s) after registration and finally on cadavers; chronologically.
*after the end of EN.600.446 timeline Prof. Armand expects us to demonstrate application on a cadaver and record video of the same.
• Requirement of parts/tools for replacement in the LARS. Since the repairing of the previous LARS was taking more time than expected we , after discussion with out mentors and Dr Taylor, switched to new LARS robot which we received on 10th April 2013.
• Working platform/software with the snake. We hope to have a working platform/software which can control the snake’s precision. This will allow us to implement accurate control of snake after mounting it on the LARS.
[1] M. D. M. Kutzer, S. M. Segreti, C. Y. Brown, R. H. Taylor, S. C.Mears, and M. Armand, “Design of a new cable-driven manipulator with a large open lumen: Preliminary applications in the minimallyinvasive removal of osteolysis,” in Robotics and Automation, 2011. ICRA 2011. Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE International Conference on, 2011.CableDrivenManipulator
[2] J. Funda, R. Taylor, B. Eldridge, S. Gomory, and K. Gruben, “Constrained Cartesian motion control for teleoperated surgical robots,” IEEE Transactions on Robotics and Automation, vol. 12, pp. 453-466, 1996.
[3] Galil Motion Control, Inc. DCM-40×0 User Manual, Rev. 1.0c. Dec, 2008. www.galilmc.com
[4] Galil Motion Control, Inc. DCM-40×0 Command Reference, Rev. 1.0d. Dec, 2008. www.galilmc.com
[5] G. Hamlin and A. Sanderson, A Novel Concentric Multilink Spherical Joint with Parallel Robotics Applications. IEEE, pp. 1267-1272. 1994.
[6] A. Kapoor, M. Li, and R. Taylor, Constrained Control for Surgical Assistant Robots. IEEE Int’l Conf. on Robotics and Automation. pp. 231-236. May 2006.
[7] A. Kapoor. Motion Constrained Control of Robots for Dexterous Surgical Tasks. Johns Hopkins University Ph.D. Thesis. Sept, 2007.
[8] P. Marayong, et. al. Spatial Motion Constraints: Theory and Demonstrations for Robot Guidance Using Virtual Fixtures. IEEE Int’l Conf. on Robotics & Automation. pp. 1954-1959. Sept. 14-19, 2003.
[9] R. Taylor, et. al. A Telerobotic Assistant for Laparoscopic Surgery. IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology. pp. 279-288. May/June 1995
Please check the Project Report for other references.