Article intro - AI enabled surgical robots

 


Samuel Schmidgall, Ji Woong Kim, Alan Kuntz, Ahmed Ezzat Ghazi & Axel Krieger published in Nature Machine Intelligence volume 6: "General-purpose foundation models for increased autonomy in robot-assisted surgery".

Abstract

The dominant paradigm for end-to-end robot learning focuses on optimizing task-specific objectives that solve a single robotic problem such as picking up an object or reaching a target position. However, recent work on high-capacity models in robotics has shown promise towards being trained on large collections of diverse and task-agnostic datasets of video demonstrations. These models have shown impressive levels of generalization to unseen circumstances, especially as the amount of data and the model complexity scale. Surgical robot systems that learn from data have struggled to advance as quickly as other fields of robot learning for a few reasons: there is a lack of existing large-scale open-source data to train models; it is challenging to model the soft-body deformations that these robots work with during surgery because simulation cannot match the physical and visual complexity of biological tissue; and surgical robots risk harming patients when tested in clinical trials and require more extensive safety measures. This Perspective aims to provide a path towards increasing robot autonomy in robot-assisted surgery through the development of a multi-modal, multi-task, vision–language–action model for surgical robots. Ultimately, we argue that surgical robots are uniquely positioned to benefit from general-purpose models and provide four guiding actions towards increased autonomy in robot-assisted surgery.

You can read more about the research at Hopkins' website: Beyond assistants: How AI could enable surgical robots to think and act autonomously.

Source: Nature


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