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Microscopy Image Analysis Feature

Hands-free image browsing device keeps infections out

June 18, 2008

Researchers at Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev (BGU) in Israel have developed a new hand gesture recognition system, tested at a Washington, D.C. hospital, that enables doctors to manipulate digital images during medical procedures by motioning instead of touching a screen, keyboard or mouse which compromises sterility and could spread infection, according to a just released article.

The June article,  “A Gesture-based Tool for Sterile Browsing of Radiology Images” in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, reports on what the authors believe is the first time a hand gesture recognition system (Gestix) was successfully implemented in an actual in vivo neurosurgical brain biopsy. It was tested at the Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C.

According to lead researcher  Juan P. Wachs, a recent Ph.D. recipient from the Dept. of Industrial Engineering and Management at BGU, “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.”

Helman Stern, a principal investigator on the project and a professor in the Dept. of Industrial Engineering and Management, explains how Gestix functions in two stages: “[There is] an initial calibration stage where the machine recognizes the surgeons’ hand gestures, and a second stage where surgeons must learn and implement eight navigation gestures, rapidly moving the hand away from a “neutral area” and back again. Gestix users even have the option of zooming in and out by moving the hand clockwise or counterclockwise.”

To avoid sending unintended signals, users may enter a “sleep” mode by dropping the hand. The gestures for sterile gesture interface are captured by a Canon VC-C4 camera, positioned above a large flat screen monitor, using an Intel Pentium and a Matrox Standard II video-capturing device.

The project lasted for two years; in the first year Juan Wachs spent a year working at IMI (Washington D.C.) as an informatics fellow on the development of the system. During the second year, there was a contract which ended between BGU and WHC (Washington Hospital Center) where Wachs continued working at BGU with Professors Helman Stern and Yael Edan, the project’s principle investigators.

At BGU, several M.Sc theses, supervised by Prof. Helman Stern and Yael Edan, have used hand gesture recognition as part of an interface to evaluate different aspects of interface design on performance in a variety of tele-robotic and tele-operated systems. Ongoing research is aiming at expanding this work to include additional control modes (e.g., voice) so as to create a multimodal telerobotic control system.

In addition, Dr. Tal Oron and her students are currently using the gesture system to evaluate human performance measures. Further research, based on video motion capture, is being conducted 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. This system, combined with a tactile body display, is intended to help the vision impaired sense their surroundings.

An abstract for the study is available here, http://www.jamia.org/cgi/content/abstract/15/3/321

SOURCE: Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev


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