Papers

6

Total Citations

105

H-Index

5

About

Daniel von Allmen is a biomedical engineer and robotics researcher whose work sits at the intersection of medical imaging, surgical robotics, and autonomous systems. His research has focused primarily on harnessing real-time three-dimensional (RT3D) ultrasound to guide robotic surgical interventions, with a particular emphasis on autonomous breast biopsy and laparoscopic procedures. His most influential contribution, "Three-Dimensional Ultrasound Guidance of Autonomous Robotic Breast Biopsy: Feasibility Study" (2009), has garnered 45 citations and demonstrated that robotic systems could independently locate and target tissue lesions without direct human control — a landmark step toward fully autonomous surgical robotics. Building on this foundation, his 2006 feasibility study on 3D ultrasound-guided surgical robots (28 citations) established early groundwork for integrating volumetric imaging into minimally invasive procedures. Across his body of work, von Allmen has advanced image segmentation algorithms, multi-core biopsy automation, and even shrapnel detection using robotic guidance. His research collectively represents a pioneering effort to reduce physician workload, improve targeting precision to within 2mm accuracy, and expand the clinical utility of autonomous robotic systems in complex medical environments.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

5
H-Index
6
Papers
105
Total Citations
18
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Three-Dimensional Ultrasound Guidance of Autonomous Robotic Breast Biopsy: Feasibility Study
45 citations · 2009
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2009 (3 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 9
🏛 Institutions: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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