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E-raamat: Cutaneous Haptic Feedback in Robotic Teleoperation

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This work addresses the challenge of providing effective cutaneous haptic feedback in robotic teleoperation, with the objective of achieving the highest degree of transparency whilst guaranteeing the stability of the considered systems. On the one hand, it evaluates teleoperation systems that provide only cutaneous cues to the operator, thus guaranteeing the highest degree of safety. This cutaneous-only approach shows intermediate performance between no force feedback and full haptic feedback provided by a grounded haptic interface, and it is best suitable for those scenarios where the safety of the system is paramount, e.g., robotic surgery. On the other hand, in order to achieve a higher level of performance, this work also investigates novel robotic teleoperation systems with force reflection able to provide mixed cutaneous and kinesthetic cues to the operator. Cutaneous cues can compensate for the temporary reduction of kinesthetic feedback necessary to satisfy certain stability conditions.

This state-of-the-art volume is oriented toward researchers, educators, and students who are interested in force feedback techniques for robotic teleoperation, cutaneous device design, cutaneous rendering methods and perception studies, as well as readers from different disciplines who are interested in applying cutaneous haptic technologies and methods to their field of interest.

Part I Force Feedback via Cutaneous Cues Only
1 Sensory Subtraction in Teleoperation: Substituting Haptic Force with Cutaneous Stimuli
3(18)
1.1 Introduction
3(3)
1.2 From Grounded Haptic Interfaces to Ungrounded Cutaneous Devices
6(4)
1.2.1 Ungrounded Cutaneous Devices
7(3)
1.3 Cutaneous Feedback in Robotic Teleoperation
10(11)
1.3.1 Normal Indentation
11(3)
1.3.2 Lateral Skin Stretch and Relative Tangential Motion
14(1)
1.3.3 Vibration
15(1)
References
16(5)
2 Needle Insertion in Simulated Soft Tissue
21(16)
2.1 Introduction
21(1)
2.2 An Ungrounded Fingertip Cutaneous Device
22(1)
2.3 Experimental Evaluation
23(10)
2.3.1 Experimental Setup
23(2)
2.3.2 Design of the Experiments
25(1)
2.3.3 Experiment #1: Comparison of the Feedback Conditions
26(3)
2.3.4 Experiment #2: Sudden Change of the Stiff Constraint
29(1)
2.3.5 Experiment #3: Stability with Time Delay
30(3)
2.4 Discussion
33(2)
2.5 Conclusions
35(2)
References
36(1)
3 Peg-in-Hole in Simulated and Real Scenarios
37(22)
3.1 Introduction
37(1)
3.2 A Fingertip Cutaneous Device for the Omega Interface
38(6)
3.2.1 Related Works on Fingertip Compliance Models
39(1)
3.2.2 Device Model and Control
40(4)
3.3 Experimental Evaluation
44(11)
3.3.1 Experiment #1: Teleoperation in a Virtual Environment
44(1)
3.3.2 Methods
45(4)
3.3.3 Experiment #2: Teleoperation in a Real Environment
49(6)
3.4 Discussion
55(1)
3.5 Conclusions
56(3)
References
57(2)
4 Remote Palpation Using the da Vinci Surgical System
59(34)
4.1 Introduction
59(1)
4.2 Cutaneous Feedback System for Remote Interaction: Contact Deformations
60(16)
4.2.1 Sensing and Actuation Systems
60(1)
4.2.2 Mapping Between Remote Sensed Data and Motor Commands
61(5)
4.2.3 Experimental Evaluation
66(8)
4.2.4 Discussion
74(2)
4.3 Cutaneous Feedback System for Remote Interaction: Contact Deformations and Vibrotactile Cues
76(12)
4.3.1 Sensing and Actuation Systems
76(2)
4.3.2 Mapping Between Remote Sensed Data and Motor Commands
78(5)
4.3.3 Experimental Evaluation
83(3)
4.3.4 Discussion
86(2)
4.4 Conclusions
88(5)
References
88(5)
Part II Force Feedback via Mixed Cutaneous and Kinesthetic Cues
5 Cutaneous and Kinesthetic Cues to Improve Transparency in Teleoperation
93(28)
5.1 Introduction
93(2)
5.2 An Ungrounded Fingertip Cutaneous Device
95(2)
5.3 Compensating for a Reduction of Kinesthetic Feedback with Cutaneous Stimuli
97(7)
5.3.1 Simple Compensation with Cutaneous Stimuli
99(2)
5.3.2 Over-Compensation with Cutaneous Stimuli
101(3)
5.4 Enhancing the Performance of Passive Teleoperation Systems with Cutaneous Stimuli
104(3)
5.4.1 Time-Domain Passivity Control for Haptic Force Feedback
104(2)
5.4.2 Force Compensation with Cutaneous Stimuli
106(1)
5.4.3 Enhanced Cutaneous-Kinesthetic Control Algorithm
107(1)
5.5 Experimental Evaluation
107(11)
5.5.1 Experiment #1: Perceived Stiffness
107(5)
5.5.2 Experiment #2: Teleoperated Needle Insertion in Soft Tissue
112(6)
5.6 Discussion
118(1)
5.7 Conclusions
119(2)
References
119(2)
6 Cutaneous and Kinesthetic Cues for Enhanced Navigation Feedback in Teleoperation
121(20)
6.1 Introduction
121(4)
6.2 A Robotic Teleoperation System for Needle Insertion
125(1)
6.3 Mixing Sensory Cues for Enhanced Navigation
126(6)
6.3.1 Slave System
126(3)
6.3.2 Master System
129(3)
6.4 Experimental Evaluation
132(4)
6.4.1 Experiment #1: Teleoperation of Flexible Needles
132(4)
6.4.2 Experiment #2: Teleoperation in a Remote Scenario
136(1)
6.5 Discussion
136(1)
6.6 Conclusions
137(4)
References
138(3)
Conclusions and Future Work 141