66,527 research outputs found
A Multi-Robot Cooperation Framework for Sewing Personalized Stent Grafts
This paper presents a multi-robot system for manufacturing personalized
medical stent grafts. The proposed system adopts a modular design, which
includes: a (personalized) mandrel module, a bimanual sewing module, and a
vision module. The mandrel module incorporates the personalized geometry of
patients, while the bimanual sewing module adopts a learning-by-demonstration
approach to transfer human hand-sewing skills to the robots. The human
demonstrations were firstly observed by the vision module and then encoded
using a statistical model to generate the reference motion trajectories. During
autonomous robot sewing, the vision module plays the role of coordinating
multi-robot collaboration. Experiment results show that the robots can adapt to
generalized stent designs. The proposed system can also be used for other
manipulation tasks, especially for flexible production of customized products
and where bimanual or multi-robot cooperation is required.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, accepted by IEEE Transactions on Industrial
Informatics, Key words: modularity, medical device customization, multi-robot
system, robot learning, visual servoing, robot sewin
A Multi-Robot Cooperation Framework for Sewing Personalized Stent Grafts
This paper presents a multi-robot system for manufacturing personalized
medical stent grafts. The proposed system adopts a modular design, which
includes: a (personalized) mandrel module, a bimanual sewing module, and a
vision module. The mandrel module incorporates the personalized geometry of
patients, while the bimanual sewing module adopts a learning-by-demonstration
approach to transfer human hand-sewing skills to the robots. The human
demonstrations were firstly observed by the vision module and then encoded
using a statistical model to generate the reference motion trajectories. During
autonomous robot sewing, the vision module plays the role of coordinating
multi-robot collaboration. Experiment results show that the robots can adapt to
generalized stent designs. The proposed system can also be used for other
manipulation tasks, especially for flexible production of customized products
and where bimanual or multi-robot cooperation is required.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, accepted by IEEE Transactions on Industrial
Informatics, Key words: modularity, medical device customization, multi-robot
system, robot learning, visual servoing, robot sewin
V2V-PoseNet: Voxel-to-Voxel Prediction Network for Accurate 3D Hand and Human Pose Estimation from a Single Depth Map
Most of the existing deep learning-based methods for 3D hand and human pose
estimation from a single depth map are based on a common framework that takes a
2D depth map and directly regresses the 3D coordinates of keypoints, such as
hand or human body joints, via 2D convolutional neural networks (CNNs). The
first weakness of this approach is the presence of perspective distortion in
the 2D depth map. While the depth map is intrinsically 3D data, many previous
methods treat depth maps as 2D images that can distort the shape of the actual
object through projection from 3D to 2D space. This compels the network to
perform perspective distortion-invariant estimation. The second weakness of the
conventional approach is that directly regressing 3D coordinates from a 2D
image is a highly non-linear mapping, which causes difficulty in the learning
procedure. To overcome these weaknesses, we firstly cast the 3D hand and human
pose estimation problem from a single depth map into a voxel-to-voxel
prediction that uses a 3D voxelized grid and estimates the per-voxel likelihood
for each keypoint. We design our model as a 3D CNN that provides accurate
estimates while running in real-time. Our system outperforms previous methods
in almost all publicly available 3D hand and human pose estimation datasets and
placed first in the HANDS 2017 frame-based 3D hand pose estimation challenge.
The code is available in https://github.com/mks0601/V2V-PoseNet_RELEASE.Comment: HANDS 2017 Challenge Frame-based 3D Hand Pose Estimation Winner (ICCV
2017), Published at CVPR 201
Optical techniques for 3D surface reconstruction in computer-assisted laparoscopic surgery
One of the main challenges for computer-assisted surgery (CAS) is to determine the intra-opera- tive morphology and motion of soft-tissues. This information is prerequisite to the registration of multi-modal patient-specific data for enhancing the surgeon’s navigation capabilites by observ- ing beyond exposed tissue surfaces and for providing intelligent control of robotic-assisted in- struments. In minimally invasive surgery (MIS), optical techniques are an increasingly attractive approach for in vivo 3D reconstruction of the soft-tissue surface geometry. This paper reviews the state-of-the-art methods for optical intra-operative 3D reconstruction in laparoscopic surgery and discusses the technical challenges and future perspectives towards clinical translation. With the recent paradigm shift of surgical practice towards MIS and new developments in 3D opti- cal imaging, this is a timely discussion about technologies that could facilitate complex CAS procedures in dynamic and deformable anatomical regions
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