Comparing position and orientation accuracy of different electromagnetic sensors for tracking during interventions

Jasper Nijkamp, Bram Schermers, Sander Schmitz, Sofieke de Jonge, Koert Kuhlmann, Ferdinand van der Heijden, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Theo Ruers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

PURPOSE: To compare the position and orientation accuracy between using one 6-degree of freedom (DOF) electromagnetic (EM) sensor, or the position information of three 5DOF sensors within the scope of tumor tracking.

METHODS: The position accuracy of Northern Digital Inc Aurora 5DOF and 6DOF sensors was determined for a table-top field generator (TTFG) up to a distance of 52 cm. For each sensor 716 positions were measured for 10 s at 15 Hz. Orientation accuracy was determined for each of the orthogonal axis at the TTFG distances of 17, 27, 37 and 47 cm. For the 6DOF sensors, orientation was determined for sensors in-line with the orientation axis, and perpendicular. 5DOF orientation accuracy was determined for a theoretical 4 cm tumor. An optical tracking system was used as reference.

RESULTS: Position RMSE and jitter were comparable between the sensors and increasing with distance. Jitter was within 0.1 cm SD within 45 cm distance to the TTFG. Position RMSE was approximately 0.1 cm up to 32 cm distance, increasing to 0.4 cm at 52 cm distance. Orientation accuracy of the 6DOF sensor was within 1[Formula: see text], except when the sensor was in-line with the rotation axis perpendicular to the TTFG plane (4[Formula: see text] errors at 47 cm). Orientation accuracy using 5DOF positions was within 1[Formula: see text] up to 37 cm and 2[Formula: see text] at 47 cm.

CONCLUSIONS: The position and orientation accuracy of a 6DOF sensor was comparable with a sensor configuration consisting of three 5DOF sensors. To achieve tracking accuracy within 1 mm and 1[Formula: see text], the distance to the TTFG should be limited to approximately 30 cm.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1487-98
Number of pages12
JournalInternational journal of computer assisted radiology and surgery
Volume11
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2016

Keywords

  • Calibration
  • Electromagnetic Phenomena
  • Humans
  • Orientation, Spatial
  • Software
  • Surgery, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation

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