Buongiorno, segnalo https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adt5254.
Dal robot quale attrezzo a disposizione del chirurgo, alla
chirurgia autonoma, il cammino continua.
Scrivo con parole non accademiche, importante è che si sta sostituendo il
nostro cervello, sempre meno autonomo, sempre più eteronomo, educare
al digitale
è l'unica risposta, anche se necessariamente lenta.
Cordialmente
Duccio (Alessandro Marzocchi)
*****
Abstract
Research on autonomous surgery has largely focused on simple task
automation in controlled environments. However, real-world surgical
applications demand dexterous manipulation over extended durations and
robust generalization to the inherent variability of human tissue. These
challenges remain difficult to address using existing logic-based or
conventional end-to-end learning strategies. To address this gap, we
propose a hierarchical framework for performing dexterous, long-horizon
surgical steps. Our approach uses a high-level policy for task planning and
a low-level policy for generating low-level trajectories. The high-level
planner plans in language space, generating task-level or corrective
instructions that guide the robot through the long-horizon steps and help
recover from errors made by the low-level policy. We validated our
framework through ex vivo experiments on cholecystectomy, a commonly
practiced minimally invasive procedure, and conducted ablation studies to
evaluate key components of the system. Our method achieves a 100% success
rate across eight different ex vivo gallbladders, operating fully
autonomously without human intervention. The hierarchical approach improved
the policy’s ability to recover from suboptimal states that are inevitable
in the highly dynamic environment of realistic surgical applications. This
work demonstrates step-level autonomy in a surgical procedure, marking a
milestone toward clinical deployment of autonomous surgical systems.

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