A robot operation that works with a dead pig
Juo-Tung Chen / Johns Hopkins University
A Robot AI
The robot is run by a two-tier Ai system trained in 17 hours of video surrounding 16,000 actions made by human operations. If work, the first layer of AI system looks at the endoscope monitoring video and the issues of the earlier instructions to each instruction of the three-dimensional motives.
In all, Gall bladder operations require 17 different functions. The robotic system made operation eight times, reaching 100 percent success in all tasks.
“The current regulical robotic technology has made some strategic approaches, but complication rates never fall from laparoscopic (by surgeons),” as the team member Axel Krieger At Johns Hopkins University in Maryland. “We make it look at what the next generation of robotic systems can help patients and surgeons.”
“Study emphasizes the art of possible AI and surgical robotics,” as Daniil Steoynov at the University College London. “Unusual improvement in computer sight for video surgery with open robotic platforms for research that can indicate operation operation.”
But many challenges remain to make the clinic use system practical, pointing to Stayanov.
In one thing, while the robot completes the task with 100 percent success, self-sufficient six times per case. For example, it can mean a grodper designed to understand an artery miss stopping the first attempt.
“There are many times where it should correct yourself, but it is all perfect autonomy,” Krierger said. “It’s right to know the first mistake and then heal himself.” The robot should also ask a person to change one of the surgical instruments for another, meaning that some level of human intervention is required.
Burning rotrigue and bay In imperial College London isolated by the growing potential of Robotic surgery. “The future is bright – and closer,” he said. “Although it is realized that people are safe, regulation should be followed, which remains an important open challenge to our sector.”
The next step, says Krieger, is to allow a robot to act autonomously with a living animal, where breathing and bleeding can be complicated things.
Topics: