Perception and Action in Teleoperated Needle Insertion
 

Paper

Nisky I, Pressman A, Pugh CM, Mussa-Ivaldi FA and Karniel A (2011). Perception and Action in Teleoperated Needle Insertion. IEEE Transactions on Haptics 4:155-166. [html] [Nisky2011.pdfNisky2011.pdf]

Abstract

​We studied the effect of delay on perception and action in contact with a force field that emulates elastic soft tissue with a rigid nonlinear boundary. Such a field is similar to forces exerted on a needle during teleoperated needle insertion. We found that delay causes motor underestimation of the stiffness of this nonlinear soft tissue, without perceptual change. These experimental results are supported by simulation of a simplified mechanical model of the arm and neural controller, and a model for perception of stiffness, which is based on regression in the force-position space. In addition, we show that changing the gain of the teleoperation channel cancels the motor effect of delay without adding perceptual distortion. We conclude that it is possible to achieve perceptual and motor transparency in virtual one-dimensional remote needle insertion task.

About the Data

Data

Experiment 1

Experiment 2

Experiment 3