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Mutual enlightenment: Augmenting human factors research in surgical robotics

Matthew Gildersleeve

Year
2013
Citations
2

Abstract

This discussion has outlined a theoretical and pragmatic framework to demonstrate that future research involving the analysis of human performance in surgical should encourage the use of phenomenology to enhance the knowledge base of this area of study. Merging experiential (first-person) and experimental (third-person) methods may possibly help improve research designs and analyses in the investigation of robotics in surgical performance. By relying solely on third-person techniques, the current methodology and interpretation used to analyze human performance in surgical robotics is limited. Recent advances in cognitive science and psychology have also recognized this limitation and have now begun to shift to neurophenomenology. Finally, discussion on recent robotics research presented here demonstrates the potential phenomenology holds for augmenting the methodological and analysis techniques currently used by researchers of human performance in surgical robotics.

Keywords

RoboticsArtificial intelligencePhenomenology (philosophy)Developmental roboticsEnlightenmentExperiential learningComputer scienceCognitive scienceRobotHuman–computer interaction

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