volume 18 issue 1 publication number 266

Eye-controlled endoscopy — a benchtop trial of a novel robotic steering platform — iGAZE2

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-06-25
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR0.764
CiteScore3.9
Impact factor3.0
ISSN18632483, 18632491
Abstract

The endoscopic control system has remained similar in design for many decades The remit of advanced therapeutic endoscopy continues to expand requiring precision control and high cognitive workloads. Robotic systems are emerging, but all still require bimanual control and expensive and large new systems. Eye tracking is an exciting area that can be used as an endoscope control system. This is a study to establish the feasibility of an eye-controlled endoscope and compare its performance and cognitive demand to use of a conventional endoscope. An eye gaze-control system consisting of eye-tracking glasses, customised software and a small motor unit was built and attached to a conventional endoscope. Twelve non-endoscopists used both the eye gaze system and a conventional endoscope to complete a benchtop task in a simulated oesophagus and stomach. Completion of tasks was timed. Subjective feedback was collected from each participant on task load using the NASA Task Load Index. Participants were significantly quicker completing the task using iGAZE2 vs a conventional endoscope (65.02 ± 16.34s vs 104.21 ± 51.31s, p = 0.013) Participants were also significantly quicker completing retroflexion using iGAZE2 vs a conventional endoscope (8.48 ± 3.08 vs 11.38 ± 5.36s, p = 0.036). Participants reported a significantly lower workload (raw NASA-TLX score) when using iGAZE2 vs the conventional endoscope (152.1 ± 63.4 vs 319.6 ± 81.6, p = 0.0001) (Fig. 7). Users found iGAZE2 to have a significantly lower temporal demand, mental demand, effort, mental demand, physical demand, and frustration level. The eye gaze system is an exciting, small, and retrofittable system to any endoscope. The system shows exciting potential as a novel endoscopic control system with a significantly lower workload and better performance in novices suggesting a more intuitive control system.

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Journal of Robotic Surgery
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Springer Nature
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Sivananthan A. et al. Eye-controlled endoscopy — a benchtop trial of a novel robotic steering platform — iGAZE2 // Journal of Robotic Surgery. 2024. Vol. 18. No. 1. 266
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Sivananthan A., Rubio-Solis A., Darzi A., Mylonas G., Patel N. Eye-controlled endoscopy — a benchtop trial of a novel robotic steering platform — iGAZE2 // Journal of Robotic Surgery. 2024. Vol. 18. No. 1. 266
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RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1007/s11701-024-02022-5
UR - https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11701-024-02022-5
TI - Eye-controlled endoscopy — a benchtop trial of a novel robotic steering platform — iGAZE2
T2 - Journal of Robotic Surgery
AU - Sivananthan, Arun
AU - Rubio-Solis, Adrian
AU - Darzi, Ara
AU - Mylonas, George
AU - Patel, Nisha
PY - 2024
DA - 2024/06/25
PB - Springer Nature
IS - 1
VL - 18
PMID - 38916651
SN - 1863-2483
SN - 1863-2491
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2024_Sivananthan,
author = {Arun Sivananthan and Adrian Rubio-Solis and Ara Darzi and George Mylonas and Nisha Patel},
title = {Eye-controlled endoscopy — a benchtop trial of a novel robotic steering platform — iGAZE2},
journal = {Journal of Robotic Surgery},
year = {2024},
volume = {18},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {jun},
url = {https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11701-024-02022-5},
number = {1},
pages = {266},
doi = {10.1007/s11701-024-02022-5}
}