Students Use Million Dollar Surgical Robot to Play Operation

Tom Goldman

Crying on the inside.
Aug 17, 2009
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Students Use Million Dollar Surgical Robot to Play Operation


A high-tech surgical robot can be used to save lives, but it's also a great way to win at Operation.

The da Vinci Surgical System is a high-tech robot that costs around $2 million and is meant to treat conditions such as cancer and artery disease. A group of students from the Johns Hopkins University Laboratory for Computational Sensing and Robotics figured: "Hey, why not use it to play Operation [http://www.amazon.com/Hasbro-4545-Operation/dp/B00000DMFM/ref=sr_1_2?s=toys-and-games&ie=UTF8&qid=1303662799&sr=1-2] too?"

Operation is a board game where players have to successfully operate on a patient named Cavity Sam to win. Sam has various holes in his body that contain humorously named parts, such as Spare Ribs and Water On the Knee. Each hole is lined with metal, and the board is electrically charged. Touching the metal on the outside of each hole with the game's included tweezers makes a buzzer sound, causing the player to lose his/her turn. The goal is to remove each part without the buzzer going off.

Critics wonder if systems like the da Vinci are truly an improvement over a trained surgeon. After watching this video, is there any doubt? The da Vinci takes Cavity Sam's Wish Bone out with ease. I just wonder how well it would do with the Charley Horse.

However, before you go spending $2 million to beat your little brother in Operation, there could be some foul play afoot. NPR emailed Carol Reiley from the video about whether or not the buzzer would have sounded from use of the da Vinci. She wrote back: "Yes, we could've grounded the robot and completed the circuit to make the nose buzz. But since it was a 2 million dollar machine, we decided against it."

Phooey. Still, it doesn't look like the robot touches the sides, so I'll call this a win. Reiley added that the video's purpose was to show off the da Vinci's "dexterity and hand-tremor reduction." It's a bit like using C4 explosives to weed your garden, but how can you not approve of something so unnecessary.

Source: NPR [http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2011/04/22/135635121/why-use-tweezers-to-play-operation-when-a-robot-will-do]


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VincentX3

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Jun 30, 2009
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I would not like to be strapped under that 2million dollar machine, it looks like an accident waiting to happen o_O

Besides! Who doesn't use C4 to weed the garden?
 

Jumplion

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Mar 10, 2008
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VincentX3 said:
I would not like to be strapped under that 2million dollar machine, it looks like an accident waiting to happen o_O

Besides! Who doesn't use C4 to weed the garden?
I use dynamite, the fire kills off the excess weeds.

OT: Hooray for overcompensating for a miniscule task!
 

DeepComet5581

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Mar 30, 2010
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Of cooouuuurrssse this has to be students. Only students would do it.

"Hey, we have access to this, like, really expensive robot."

"What can it do?"

"It can, like, do really major surgery, or something."

"Why don't we make it play operation?"

"That would be, like, SO COOL!"
 

The Random One

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May 29, 2008
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Tom Goldman said:
It's a bit like using C4 explosives to weed your garden
It's more like trying to show how much better C4 is compared to gunpowder by showing just what it did to your garden when you trying to use it as a lawnmowner.

Captcha: how ivories. HOW INDEED
 

Rad Party God

Party like it's 2010!
Feb 23, 2010
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I use a chainsaw to cut a steak, why wouldn't I use a 2 million dollar surgical machine to play a board game?
 

Eleima

Keeper of the GWJ Holocron
Feb 21, 2010
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Well, I'm not going to cast any stones, this is probably something I would've done in my younger, carefree days as a med student.
Now, however, I still have to disapprove, because ive seen these in actions, they're technological marvels, and they cost a bundle. It's hard enough justifying the cost of these to the higher up's without having kid surgeons playing Operation...
 

godofallu

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Jun 8, 2010
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But operation is really easy... Give me 2 million and i'll fly over and beat it for you. Hell i'll do it for 1 million.
 

dbmountain

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Feb 24, 2010
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I find it hilarious how upset people are getting about this. It's not like this machine was specifically purchases for these students to play Operation. They probably had some spare time and wanted to make a funny video. Just listen to the music and the obviously sarcastic expressions the students make. Anyone who thinks this is their only use for the machine isn't thinking straight. Why are people taking this seriously?
 

Owlslayer

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Nov 26, 2009
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I find it funny in a good way. I seriously doubt that the machine could have been used on some fancy operation at the same time.
Way to go, students!