Quantitative characterization of surgical movements can improve the quality
of patient care by informing the development of new training protocols for
surgeons, and the design and control of surgical robots. Here, we present a
novel characterization of open and teleoperated suturing movements that is
based on principles from computational motor control. We focus on the
extensively-studied relationship between the speed of movement and its
geometry. In three-dimensional movements, this relationship is defined by the
one-sixth power law that relates between the speed, the curvature, and the
torsion of movement trajectories. We fitted the parameters of the one-sixth
power law to suturing movements of participants with different levels of
surgical experience in open (using sensorized forceps) and teleoperated (using
the da Vinci Research Kit / da Vinci Surgical System) conditions from two
different datasets. We found that teleoperation significantly affected the
parameters of the power law, and that there were large differences between
different stages of movement. These results open a new avenue for studying the
effect of teleoperation on the spatiotemporal characteristics of the movements
of surgeons, and lay the foundation for the development of new algorithms for
automatic segmentation of surgical tasks.Comment: Preprint of an article submitted for consideration in Journal of
Medical Robotics Research, \c{opyright} 2017 copyright World Scientific
Publishing Company, http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscinet/jmr