A Data-Driven Model with Hysteresis Compensation for I2RIS Robot
Retinal microsurgery is a high-precision surgery performed on an exceedingly delicate tissue. It now requires extensively trained and highly skilled surgeons. Given the restricted range of instrument motion in the confined intraocular space, and also potentially restricting instrument contact with t...
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Zusammenfassung: | Retinal microsurgery is a high-precision surgery performed on an exceedingly
delicate tissue. It now requires extensively trained and highly skilled
surgeons. Given the restricted range of instrument motion in the confined
intraocular space, and also potentially restricting instrument contact with the
sclera, snake-like robots may prove to be a promising technology to provide
surgeons with greater flexibility, dexterity, space access, and positioning
accuracy during retinal procedures requiring high precision and advantageous
tooltip approach angles, such as retinal vein cannulation and epiretinal
membrane peeling. Kinematics modeling of these robots is an essential step
toward accurate position control, however, as opposed to conventional
manipulators, modeling of these robots does not follow a straightforward method
due to their complex mechanical structure and actuation mechanisms. Especially,
in wire-driven snake-like robots, the hysteresis problem due to the wire
tension condition can have a significant impact on the positioning accuracy of
these robots. In this paper, we proposed an experimental kinematics model with
a hysteresis compensation algorithm using the probabilistic Gaussian mixture
models (GMM) Gaussian mixture regression (GMR) approach. Experimental results
on the two-degree-of-freedom (DOF) integrated robotic intraocular snake (I2RIS)
show that the proposed model provides 0.4 deg accuracy, which is an overall 60%
and 70% of improvement for yaw and pitch degrees of freedom, respectively,
compared to a previous model of this robot. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2303.05704 |