From Monocular Vision to Autonomous Action: Guiding Tumor Resection via 3D Reconstruction
Acar, Ayberk, Smith, Mariana, Al-Zogbi, Lidia, Watts, Tanner, Li, Fangjie, Li, Hao, Yilmaz, Nural, Scheikl, Paul Maria, d'Almeida, Jesse F., Sharma, Susheela, Branscombe, Lauren, Ertop, Tayfun Efe, Webster, Robert J. III, Oguz, Ipek, Kuntz, Alan, Krieger, Axel, Wu, Jie Ying
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Surgical automation requires precise guidance and understanding of the scene. Current methods in the literature rely on bulky depth cameras to create maps of the anatomy, however this does not translate well to space-limited clinical applications. Monocular cameras are small and allow minimally invasive surgeries in tight spaces but additional processing is required to generate 3D scene understanding. We propose a 3D mapping pipeline that uses only RGB images to create segmented point clouds of the target anatomy. To ensure the most precise reconstruction, we compare different structure from motion algorithms' performance on mapping the central airway obstructions, and test the pipeline on a downstream task of tumor resection. In several metrics, including post-procedure tissue model evaluation, our pipeline performs comparably to RGB-D cameras and, in some cases, even surpasses their performance. These promising results demonstrate that automation guidance can be achieved in minimally invasive procedures with monocular cameras. This study is a step toward the complete autonomy of surgical robots.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Mar-20-2025
- Country:
- North America > United States > Tennessee > Knox County > Knoxville (0.14)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine
- Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (0.94)
- Surgery (1.00)
- Therapeutic Area > Oncology (0.93)
- Health & Medicine
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Machine Learning (1.00)
- Robots (0.96)
- Vision (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence