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Surgical robot developed by Harvard Sony

Surgical robots can work with high precision and provide minimally invasive surgery to surgeons. However, such a system is large and requires space in the operating room. The Harvard Wis Research Institute and a team from Sony developed a miniature remote center of motion manipulator (mini-RCM), a small robot inspired by origami.

The mini-RCM is the size of a tennis ball and weighs only one coin, but the research team constructed it using a technology called Pop-Up MEMS developed by Wiss Institute. Pop-up MEMS is a manufacturing technology developed by the research team of Professor Robert Wood of the Wis Research Institute. It is a pop-up like a picture book in which a three-dimensional shape pops out by laminating thin materials and laser cutting them.

Mini-RCM is said to have made and combined a small linear actuator using a piezoelectric ceramic material that makes the main moving part structure into a parallel link and changes its shape by the electric field driving it. The research team found that the mini-RCM could run 68% more than a manual tool. In a simulated environment, a needle was inserted into the eye to inject the drug into the rear area of the eyeball.

It still takes a lot of time before this little robot can actually be used in surgery that requires fine work. However, it can be said that a place that anyone can easily install with a size that can be easily carried is important to the on-site doctor. Related information can be found here .

lswcap

lswcap

Through the monthly AHC PC and HowPC magazine era, he has watched 'technology age' in online IT media such as ZDNet, electronic newspaper Internet manager, editor of Consumer Journal Ivers, TechHolic publisher, and editor of Venture Square. I am curious about this market that is still full of vitality.

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