A computationally efficient method for hand-eye calibration
File(s)10.1007%2Fs11548-017-1646-x.pdf (2.58 MB)
Published version
Author(s)
Zhang, Zhiqiang
Zhang, Lin
Yang, Guang-Zhong
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Purpose
Surgical robots with cooperative control and semiautonomous features have shown increasing clinical potential, particularly for repetitive tasks under imaging and vision guidance. Effective performance of an autonomous task requires accurate hand–eye calibration so that the transformation between the robot coordinate frame and the camera coordinates is well defined. In practice, due to changes in surgical instruments, online hand–eye calibration must be performed regularly. In order to ensure seamless execution of the surgical procedure without affecting the normal surgical workflow, it is important to derive fast and efficient hand–eye calibration methods.
Methods
We present a computationally efficient iterative method for hand–eye calibration. In this method, dual quaternion is introduced to represent the rigid transformation, and a two-step iterative method is proposed to recover the real and dual parts of the dual quaternion simultaneously, and thus the estimation of rotation and translation of the transformation.
Results
The proposed method was applied to determine the rigid transformation between the stereo laparoscope and the robot manipulator. Promising experimental and simulation results have shown significant convergence speed improvement to 3 iterations from larger than 30 with regard to standard optimization method, which illustrates the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed method.
Surgical robots with cooperative control and semiautonomous features have shown increasing clinical potential, particularly for repetitive tasks under imaging and vision guidance. Effective performance of an autonomous task requires accurate hand–eye calibration so that the transformation between the robot coordinate frame and the camera coordinates is well defined. In practice, due to changes in surgical instruments, online hand–eye calibration must be performed regularly. In order to ensure seamless execution of the surgical procedure without affecting the normal surgical workflow, it is important to derive fast and efficient hand–eye calibration methods.
Methods
We present a computationally efficient iterative method for hand–eye calibration. In this method, dual quaternion is introduced to represent the rigid transformation, and a two-step iterative method is proposed to recover the real and dual parts of the dual quaternion simultaneously, and thus the estimation of rotation and translation of the transformation.
Results
The proposed method was applied to determine the rigid transformation between the stereo laparoscope and the robot manipulator. Promising experimental and simulation results have shown significant convergence speed improvement to 3 iterations from larger than 30 with regard to standard optimization method, which illustrates the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed method.
Date Issued
2017-07-19
Date Acceptance
2017-07-10
Citation
International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery, 2017, 12 (10), pp.1775-1787
ISSN
1861-6429
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Start Page
1775
End Page
1787
Journal / Book Title
International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery
Volume
12
Issue
10
Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2017. This article is an open access publication
License URL
Sponsor
Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC)
Commission of the European Communities
Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (E
Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC)
Grant Number
EP/H009744/1
248782
EP/K503733/1
EP/L014149/1
Subjects
Science & Technology
Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Engineering, Biomedical
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Surgery
Engineering
Minimally invasive surgery
Robot-camera calibration
Hand-eye calibration
Optimization
3D TRACKING
ALGORITHM
SURGERY
TISSUE
OPTIMIZATION
QUATERNIONS
SENSOR
Publication Status
Published