This article focuses on ethical issues raised by increasing levels of autonomy for surgical robots. These ethical issues are explored mainly by reference to state-ofart case studies and imminent advances in Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) and Microsurgery. In both area, surgicalworkspace is limited and the required precision is high. For this reason, increasing levels of robotic autonomy can make a significant difference there, and ethically justified control sharing between humans and robots must be introduced. In particular, from a responsibility and accountability perspective suitable policies for theMeaningfulHuman Control (MHC) of increasingly autonomous surgical robots are proposed. It is highlighted how MHC should be modulated in accordance with various levels of autonomy for MIS and Microsurgery robots. Moreover, finer MHC distinctions are introduced to deal with contextual conditions concerning e.g. soft or rigid anatomical environments. Keywords: RAS,MIS; microsurgery; ethics; meaningful human control; shared-control; human-robot interaction
Autonomy in surgical robots and its meaningful human control / Ficuciello, Fanny; Tamburrini, Guglielmo; Arezzo, Alberto; Villani, Luigi; Siciliano, Bruno. - In: PALADYN. - ISSN 2081-4836. - 10:1(2019), pp. 30-43. [10.1515/pjbr-2019-0002]
Autonomy in surgical robots and its meaningful human control
Ficuciello, Fanny
;Tamburrini, Guglielmo;Villani, Luigi;Siciliano, Bruno
2019
Abstract
This article focuses on ethical issues raised by increasing levels of autonomy for surgical robots. These ethical issues are explored mainly by reference to state-ofart case studies and imminent advances in Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) and Microsurgery. In both area, surgicalworkspace is limited and the required precision is high. For this reason, increasing levels of robotic autonomy can make a significant difference there, and ethically justified control sharing between humans and robots must be introduced. In particular, from a responsibility and accountability perspective suitable policies for theMeaningfulHuman Control (MHC) of increasingly autonomous surgical robots are proposed. It is highlighted how MHC should be modulated in accordance with various levels of autonomy for MIS and Microsurgery robots. Moreover, finer MHC distinctions are introduced to deal with contextual conditions concerning e.g. soft or rigid anatomical environments. Keywords: RAS,MIS; microsurgery; ethics; meaningful human control; shared-control; human-robot interactionFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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