Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7124204 | Measurement | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Motion analysis is employed to assess minimally invasive surgical psychomotor skills in box trainers. Tracking of laparoscopic instruments requires sensor-based systems that can be expensive, limit movements and modify their ergonomic properties. We evaluate the feasibility of using Leap Motion as a cheap, unobtrusive alternative. Four experiments were performed to determine its precision while tracking a laparoscopic instrument inside and outside a box trainer. Static long and short term precision of the Leap Motion was <2.5Â mm. Precision between 12 different positions within the box trainer was <0.7Â mm for all measured distances between neighbors. Dynamic precision when moving the instrument for 200Â mm ranged between 2 and 15Â mm. Leap Motion presents acceptable precision values inside a box trainer. Improvements are still required (e.g.: multiple instruments' tracking). Once solved, a validation study should verify the usefulness of Leap Motion to objectively measure skills of novices and residents during training.
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Authors
I. Oropesa, T.L. de Jong, P. Sánchez-González, J. Dankelman, E.J. Gómez,