Sebastiaan Stuij - Usability Evaluation of the Kinect in Aiding Surgeon-Computer.
Afstudeercolloquium
15:00 uur
Bernoulliborg 289
Gesture-based interaction in the operating room can provide surgeons with a way to interact with medical images of the patient in a direct and sterile way as opposed to instructing an assistant. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a modern gesture-based interface using the Kinect is considered desirable and feasible during surgical procedures. To this end, we conducted a usability evaluation on a gesture-controlled medical image viewer with surgeons in a controlled operating room environment in the UMCG Skills Lab. Participants indicated that they would like to incorporate the system in the OR, even though performance measures indicated that the tested system is less accurate and slower when compared to asking an assistant. In a second study, we evaluated two popular gesture-based selection techniques (‘Dwell’ and ‘Push’) because of the importance of selection time and accuracy in surgical tasks. Results from this experiment indicated that the tested techniques were moderately less accurate while selection time was higher for gesture-based selection techniques when compared to the mouse condition. Overall, our studies show that GBI in the operating room is promising but possible refinements include additional functionality, recognition accuracy, more precise cursor control and more ‘natural’ gestures for certain functionality.
Last modified: | 13 June 2019 1.40 p.m. |
More news
-
24 March 2025
UG 28th in World's Most International Universities 2025 rankings
The University of Groningen has been ranked 28th in the World's Most International Universities 2025 by Times Higher Education. With this, the UG leaves behind institutions such as MIT and Harvard. The 28th place marks an increase of five places: in...
-
05 March 2025
Women in Science
The UG celebrates International Women’s Day with a special photo series: Women in Science.
-
16 December 2024
Jouke de Vries: ‘The University will have to be flexible’
2024 was a festive year for the University of Groningen. In this podcast, Jouke de Vries, the chair of the Executive Board, looks back.