AR - Not for the Faint Hearted

Here's a fun video showing of the results of a paper by some students from Imperial College, London back in 2008.
The abstract says:
Accurate estimation and tracking of dynamic tissue deformation is important to motion compensation, intra-operative surgical guidance and navigation in minimally invasive surgery. Current approaches to tissue deformation tracking are generally based on machine vision techniques for natural scenes which are not well suited to MIS because tissue deformation cannot be easily modeled by using ad hoc representations. Such techniques do not deal well with inter-reflection changes and may be susceptible to instrument occlusion. The purpose of this paper is to present an online learning based feature tracking method suitable for in vivo applications.

In other words, they are augmenting a live beating heart, muhahaha!



Soft Tissue Tracking for Minimally Invasive Surgery Learning Local Deformation Online. Peter Mountney and Guang-Zhong Yang

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

This work is a combination of two techniques.

The visualisation is done using an approach called Inverse Realism (http://www.springerlink.com/content/9q7711161641q0hu/).

The surface of the heart is tracked using an approach outlined in the paper above. "Soft Tissue Tracking for Minimally Invasive Surgery Learning Local Deformation Online".


The surface is tracked using the approach outlined in (http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/~pmountne/publications/MICCAI%202008.pdf)

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