AI gives needles the ability to navigate living tissue on their own
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - 12-Oct-2023Self-driving needle could make surgery less invasive and more accessible
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Faculty of the Department of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ron Alterovitz joined the faculty of the Department of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2009. He leads the Computational Robotics Research Group, which addresses fundamental algorithmic challenges required to enable robots to safely and autonomously complete tasks in clinical and home environments. His research focuses on robot motion planning and physically-based simulation for medical and assistive robotics applications, including surgical assistance, treatment planning, medical image registration, physician training, and personal assistance.
Dr. Alterovitz earned his B.S. with Honors from Caltech in 2001. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley in 2006 in Industrial Engineering and Operations Research. Prior to joining UNC, he was selected for an NIH Postdoctoral Research Fellowship and conducted research at the Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department at UC Berkeley and the UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center. He also spent a year with the Robotics and AI group at LAAS-CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) in Toulouse, France.
Visit website: https://cs.unc.edu/person/ron-alterovitz/
See also: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - Public research university.
Details last updated 13-Oct-2023
Self-driving needle could make surgery less invasive and more accessible