Will Panitch

2papers

2 Papers

ROJul 13, 2023
Self-Supervised Learning for Interactive Perception of Surgical Thread for Autonomous Suture Tail-Shortening

Vincent Schorp, Will Panitch, Kaushik Shivakumar et al.

Accurate 3D sensing of suturing thread is a challenging problem in automated surgical suturing because of the high state-space complexity, thinness and deformability of the thread, and possibility of occlusion by the grippers and tissue. In this work we present a method for tracking surgical thread in 3D which is robust to occlusions and complex thread configurations, and apply it to autonomously perform the surgical suture "tail-shortening" task: pulling thread through tissue until a desired "tail" length remains exposed. The method utilizes a learned 2D surgical thread detection network to segment suturing thread in RGB images. It then identifies the thread path in 2D and reconstructs the thread in 3D as a NURBS spline by triangulating the detections from two stereo cameras. Once a 3D thread model is initialized, the method tracks the thread across subsequent frames. Experiments suggest the method achieves a 1.33 pixel average reprojection error on challenging single-frame 3D thread reconstructions, and an 0.84 pixel average reprojection error on two tracking sequences. On the tail-shortening task, it accomplishes a 90% success rate across 20 trials. Supplemental materials are available at https://sites.google.com/berkeley.edu/autolab-surgical-thread/ .

ROAug 22, 2024
Automating Deformable Gasket Assembly

Simeon Adebola, Tara Sadjadpour, Karim El-Refai et al.

In Gasket Assembly, a deformable gasket must be aligned and pressed into a narrow channel. This task is common for sealing surfaces in the manufacturing of automobiles, appliances, electronics, and other products. Gasket Assembly is a long-horizon, high-precision task and the gasket must align with the channel and be fully pressed in to achieve a secure fit. To compare approaches, we present 4 methods for Gasket Assembly: one policy from deep imitation learning and three procedural algorithms. We evaluate these methods with 100 physical trials. Results suggest that the Binary+ algorithm succeeds in 10/10 on the straight channel whereas the learned policy based on 250 human teleoperated demonstrations succeeds in 8/10 trials and is significantly slower. Code, CAD models, videos, and data can be found at https://berkeleyautomation.github.io/robot-gasket/