Abstract

Physiological tremor is an involuntary and rhythmic movement of the body specially the hands. The vibrations in hand-held surgical instruments caused by physiological tremor can cause unacceptable imprecision in microsurgery. To rectify this problem, many adaptive filtering-based methods have been developed to model the tremor to remove it from the tip of microsurgery devices. The existing tremor modeling algorithms such as the weighted Fourier Linear Combiner (wFLC) algorithm and its extensions operate on the x, y, and z dimensions of the tremor signals independently. These algorithms are blind to the dynamic couplings between the three dimensions. We hypothesized that a system that takes these coupling information into account can model the tremor with more accuracy compared to the existing methods. Tremor data was recorded from five novice subjects and modeled with a novel quaternion weighted Fourier Linear Combiner (QwFLC). We compared the modeling performance of the proposed QwFLC with that of the conventional wFLC algorithm. Results showed that QwFLC improves the modeling performance by about 20% at the cost of higher computational complexity.

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