期刊论文详细信息
Healthcare Technology Letters
Distance sonification in image-guided neurosurgery
article
Joseph Plazak1  Simon Drouin3  Louis Collins3  Marta Kersten-Oertel1 
[1] Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering & PERFORM Centre, Concordia University;School of Music, Illinois Wesleyan University;McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, McGill University
关键词: neurophysiology;    brain;    surgery;    medical image processing;    biomedical optical imaging;    distance sonification;    image-guided neurosurgery;    neuronavigation;    surgical probe location;    preoperative models;    patient anatomy;    audible feedback;    distance information;    sonified distance information;    intraoperative brain imaging system;    auditory distance cues;    locating specified points;    preoperative scan;    surgical openings;    individual surgical tasks;    visual information;    auditory information;    three-dimensional volume;   
DOI  :  10.1049/htl.2017.0074
学科分类:肠胃与肝脏病学
来源: Wiley
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【 摘 要 】

Image-guided neurosurgery, or neuronavigation, has been used to visualise the location of a surgical probe by mapping the probe location to pre-operative models of a patient's anatomy. One common limitation of this approach is that it requires the surgeon to divert their attention away from the patient and towards the neuronavigation system. In order to improve this type of application, the authors designed a system that sonifies (i.e. provides audible feedback of) distance information between a surgical probe and the location of the anatomy of interest. A user study ( n = 15) was completed to determine the utility of sonified distance information within an existing neuronavigation platform (Intraoperative Brain Imaging System (IBIS) Neuronav). The authors’ results were consistent with the idea that combining auditory distance cues with existing visual information from image-guided surgery systems may result in greater accuracy when locating specified points on a pre-operative scan, thereby potentially reducing the extent of the required surgical openings, as well as potentially increasing the precision of individual surgical tasks. Further, the authors’ results were also consistent with the hypothesis that combining auditory and visual information reduces the perceived difficulty in locating a target location within a three-dimensional volume.

【 授权许可】

CC BY|CC BY-ND|CC BY-NC|CC BY-NC-ND   

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