Reference : Real-time error control for surgical simulation
Scientific congresses, symposiums and conference proceedings : Poster
Human health sciences : Surgery
Computational Sciences
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/29000
Real-time error control for surgical simulation
English
Bui, Huu Phuoc mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Communication (FSTC) > Engineering Research Unit >]
Tomar, Satyendra [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Communication (FSTC) > Engineering Research Unit >]
Courtecuisse, Hadrien [Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - CNRS > > > Dr]
Cotin, Stéphane [Inria de Nancy > > > Dr]
Bordas, Stéphane mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Communication (FSTC) > Engineering Research Unit >]
12-Dec-2016
A0
No
Yes
International
Computational Sciences for Medicine
from 12-12-2016 to 14-12-2016
Université du Luxembourg
Luxembourg
Luxembourg
[en] Finite element method ; adaptive refinement ; constraint-based interaction. ; real-time error estimate
[en] Objective: To present the first real-time a posteriori error-driven adaptive finite element approach for real-time simulation and to demonstrate the method on a needle insertion problem. Methods: We use corotational elasticity and a frictional needle/tissue interaction model based on friction. The problem is solved using finite elements within SOFA. The refinement strategy relies upon a hexahedron-based finite element method, combined with a posteriori error estimation driven local $h$-refinement, for simulating soft tissue deformation. Results: We control the local and global error level in the mechanical fields (e.g. displacement or stresses) during the simulation. We show the convergence of the algorithm on academic examples, and demonstrate its practical usability on a percutaneous procedure involving needle insertion in a liver. For the latter case, we compare the force displacement curves obtained from the proposed adaptive algorithm with that obtained from a uniform refinement approach. Conclusions: Error control guarantees that a tolerable error level is not exceeded during the simulations. Local mesh refinement accelerates simulations. Significance: Our work provides a first step to discriminate between discretization error and modeling error by providing a robust quantification of discretization error during simulations.
University of Strasbourg, USIAS (BPC 14/Arc 10138) ; ERC-StG RealTCut (grant agreement No. 279578) ; European project RASimAs (FP7 ICT-2013.5.2 No610425)
Researchers ; Professionals ; Students
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/29000

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