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Doctors in Washington D.C. use the gestural UI during an "in vivo" neurosurgical brain biopsy, controlling it with precise hand motions, while keeping their skin sterile, helping to prevent the chance of infection.  (Source: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)
The new and growing field of gestural computing got a serious field test during brain surgery

Gestural interfaces are a hot new field of computing.  Microsoft announced that its upcoming OS -- Windows 7 -- will rely heavily on gestures and touch.  In a most basic sense, a gestural interface is controlled by movements of the hands or arms, allowing users to gesture to literally scroll around images on screen.  Sometimes this is coupled with touch in devices such as the iPhone, where a pinching gesture can shrink or expand items.

Continuing the progress in the field of gestural computing, researchers at Israel's Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) developed a new gestural computer system specially designed for medical use.  In the past, doctors used touch screens or mice to navigate about images during surgeries.  However, by touching the screen, they risk compromising sterility and introducing infection into the surgery site.

The new system is purely gestural and requires no touch.  It allows doctors to scroll around images by moving their hands in front of the screen.

The system received an impressive field test at a Washington D.C. hospital and the results are detailed in the June article “A Gesture-based Tool for Sterile Browsing of Radiology Images" in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association

Juan P. Wachs, a recent Ph.D. recipient from the Department of Industrial Engineering and Management at BGU lead the research, which he describes stating, "A sterile human-machine interface is of supreme importance because it is the means by which the surgeon controls medical information, avoiding patient contamination, the operating room (OR) and the other surgeons.  This could replace touch screens now used in many hospital operating rooms which must be sealed to prevent accumulation or spreading of contaminants and requires smooth surfaces that must be thoroughly cleaned after each procedure – but sometimes aren't. With infection rates at U.S. hospitals now at unacceptably high rates, our system offers a possible alternative."

The new system, known as Gestix, eliminates the need for complex and largely ineffective sterilization procedures on today's OR touch screens.  When surgeons first start with the system, they train it and learn to use it by learning to move their hand in one of eight directions away from a neutral area, fast.  This movement scrolls the image.  They also learn to zoom in and out by rotating their hand clockwise or counterclockwise.  To avoid misleading signals, when the doctor is done, they drop their hand which triggers a sleep mode.

The hand motions are captured using a Canon VC-C4 camera and they are processed by an Intel Pentium processor and a Matrox Standard II Video Capture device.  The system was tested to much success at the Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C during two "in vivo" neurosurgical brain biopsies.  This may be the first time such a system was used with an "in vivo" procedure, according to the researchers.

Wachs worked with colleagues Professors Helman Stern and Yael Edan on the project and with a variety of M.S. students, who theses pertained to the topic.  Ongoing research is focusing to expand the gestural interface for use in tele-robotic and tele-operated systems.  By adding voice recognition, researchers hope to create a system with many control modes (multimodal). 

Other additional research on the imaging side is being developed by Prof. Helman Stern and Dr. Tal Oren of the Dept. of Industrial Engineering and Management and Dr. Amir Shapiro of the Dept. of Mechanical Engineering.  They aim to help the vision impaired navigate better through use of this system and a tactile body display.

BGU's staff has not announced the current commercialization plans for the technology, but it seems likely that it will soon be finding its way into hospitals.



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Wii-Malpractice
By therealnickdanger on 6/17/2008 1:57:13 PM , Rating: 4
I can't wait to see how this plays out!




RE: Wii-Malpractice
By MrPoletski on 6/18/2008 1:36:01 PM , Rating: 5
I can't wait till it hits the pr0n industry.

I want to jiggle boobies with my hands from a distance!


RE: Wii-Malpractice
By therealnickdanger on 6/19/2008 8:05:00 AM , Rating: 3
If you're really desperate, you could always pack on an extra hundred pounds and jiggle your own!


a waste of $$$ right now...all for PR I guess.
By DarkAvator on 6/17/2008 6:11:40 PM , Rating: 2
Wouldn't the doc rather tell the technician to move the mouse, rather than spending a few thousand $$$ so that he can move the cursor with his hands in the air.

Most of the time the doctor is too focus on the problem at hand to notice annoyances like itches and boogers....but there is always a nurse or other docs around.




By NickWV on 6/17/2008 7:58:32 PM , Rating: 3
I don't know about you but telling someone to do something with a mouse is a heck of a lot different from doing it yourself. People not always have the same exact understanding and I would think in the operating room you don't really have time to stop and explain exactly what the person operating the computer needs to do. You need it done and you need it done fast... correctly... or a person might die.


Hmm...
By MikeBald on 6/17/2008 4:03:51 PM , Rating: 2
... why not just set up foot paddles for switching between the images? Seems like the cheaper way to go.




RE: Hmm...
By Nyamekye on 6/17/2008 8:11:37 PM , Rating: 2
Hmm... Maybe cheaper, but if I were a doctor I wouldn't want anyone to confuse the computer with a sewing machine.


Huh...
By Polynikes on 6/17/08, Rating: -1
RE: Huh...
By MrBlastman on 6/17/2008 1:55:19 PM , Rating: 3
Lets see, because they aren't using gestures to actually cut and operate on the brain, but instead they are using them to manipulate charts and images that allow them to follow where they need to cut and operate.

I think this is a GREAT idea. They can keep their hands clean (or covered in grey matter), not wipe and spatter it all over the display panel, x-rays or other documentation, and instead keep the guts to the patient.

That is, if they don't flick their hands too fast. Still, it doesn't quite solve the age old problem of - what do the surgeons do if they get an itch in their nose and a booger needs to be extracted...


RE: Huh...
By JasonMick (blog) on 6/17/2008 1:59:59 PM , Rating: 3
Well, they weren't doing the cutting part of the surgery with the technology, just the imaging which assisted with it. If they scrolled a bit to far, or something, it would not likely be life or death.

And given the relatively small risk, the benefit to the research seems pretty obvious --
which sounds more impressive, some relatively routine procedure like bariatric surgery or BRAIN surgery???

Seems like a smart choice to me.

The patients might not have known, or even if they did, if they understood the minimal risk, they probably would have no problem with consenting.


RE: Huh...
By feelingshorter on 6/17/2008 2:10:31 PM , Rating: 2
Because if you test it out in the most delicate situations, all the other possibilities will follow. Plus its good publicity. The patient is safer with it since the doctor don't have to touch any buttons.

Someone else would be saying the opposite thing had they tested out with a dentist since even dentist need to scroll through xray pictures of your teeth. Someone can also say "why would you test it out on a dentist? Its just teeth." Well fine but the brain and real surgery needs to be sterile.


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