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A distinctive feature of
Hunterís MSR is its immersive virtual environment which fuses video, touch,
and sound into a virtual reality experience. The haptic environment in
Hunterís system is fused with 3D stereo camera images fed to a head-mounted
display. As if in a flight simulator the surgeon can rehearse his procedure
on the model of the individual patient he has constructed. In addition, the
model can be used as a training site for student surgeons, co-present during
a practice surgery, sharing the same video screen and feeling the same
surgical moves as the master surgeon. But such systems can also be deployed
in a collaborative telesurgery system, allowing different specialists to be
faded in to ìtake the controlsî during different parts of the procedure.
Indeed, a ìcollaborative clinicî incorporating these features was
demonstrated at NASA-Ames on May 5, 1999 with participants at five different
sites around the US.
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