Papers

5

Total Citations

25

H-Index

3

About

Dean Callaghan is a researcher specializing in telerobotic surgery, haptic feedback systems, and surgical instrumentation, with a particular focus on developing force measurement technologies for minimally invasive robotic surgery (MIRS). His work addresses one of the most pressing challenges in modern surgical robotics: the absence of meaningful haptic feedback, which limits a surgeon's sense of immersion and precision during remote procedures. Callaghan's most cited contribution, "Force Measurement Methods in Telerobotic Surgery: Implications for End-Effector Manufacture" (2008, 11 citations), laid important groundwork for understanding how position and force information can be effectively relayed from remote surgical sites to operating surgeons in real time. His subsequent research explored the application of Fibre Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors to sensorized surgical instruments, including scissor blades, demonstrating innovative pathways for integrating sensitive force detection into compact end-effectors. His 2020 work on force measurement evaluation platforms further refined characterization methodologies for telerobotic cutting applications, accumulating 7 citations. Across a research career spanning over a decade, Callaghan has made consistent contributions to bridging engineering precision and surgical practicality, helping to advance safer, more immersive robotic surgical systems for future clinical use.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

3
H-Index
5
Papers
25
Total Citations
5
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Force Measurement Methods in Telerobotic Surgery: Implications for End-Effector Manufacture
11 citations · 2008
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2008 (1 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 5
🏛 Institutions: Technological University Dublin

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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