Interactive-Rate Supervisory Control for Arbitrarily-Routed Multi-Tendon Robots via Motion Planning
Michael Bentley, Caleb Rucker, Alan Kuntz

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fast, interactive motion-planning system for arbitrarily-routed tendon-driven robots used in minimally invasive surgery, enabling real-time collision-free trajectory generation in complex anatomical environments.
Contribution
The work presents a novel 3-phase motion-planning system with a significantly faster kinematic model and collision detection, allowing real-time planning for complex tendon-driven robots.
Findings
Achieves over 1,000x faster kinematic calculations
Generates plans at 14.8 Hz in complex environments
17,700x faster than standard motion planning algorithms
Abstract
Tendon-driven robots, where one or more tendons under tension bend and manipulate a flexible backbone, can improve minimally invasive surgeries involving difficult-to-reach regions in the human body. Planning motions safely within constrained anatomical environments requires accuracy and efficiency in shape estimation and collision checking. Tendon robots that employ arbitrarily-routed tendons can achieve complex and interesting shapes, enabling them to travel to difficult-to-reach anatomical regions. Arbitrarily-routed tendon-driven robots have unintuitive nonlinear kinematics. Therefore, we envision clinicians leveraging an assistive interactive-rate motion planner to automatically generate collision-free trajectories to clinician-specified destinations during minimally-invasive surgical procedures. Standard motion-planning techniques cannot achieve interactive-rate motion planning…
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