By Maki Becker, The Buffalo News, N.Y. May 11--Dan Nelson got the chance Saturday to meet the robot that saved his life. This past fall, Nelson, 77, a retired water treatment plant worker from Jamestown, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer.
Surgeons already operate on patients using the Da Vinci surgical system's robotic arms (right), but Stephen Smith and his team at Duke (left) are now training bots to perform in the OR by themselves. (Photographs Courtesy of Duke University, Intuitive Surgical)
Investigators at Duke are all enthused with a possibility of autonomous robots one day operating on your autonomic nervous system, and other parts: Engineers at Duke University believe that the results of feasibility studies conducted in their laboratory represent the first concrete steps toward...
DURHAM: The day may be getting a little closer when robots will perform surgery on patients in dangerous situations or in remote locations, such as on the battlefield or in space, with minimal human guidance. According to Eurekalert, the news service of the American...