Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control

Rotation control of single biological cells is an essential part of several cell surgery applications. It is the starting point for the subsequent analysis. Under a microscope with limited vision and space, biological cells sometimes need to be rotated correctly to make certain cellular structures o...

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Main Author: Cui, Shuai
Other Authors: Ang Wei Tech
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173852
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-173852
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering
Robotic micromanipulation
Single cell manipulation
Image processing
Visual servo control
spellingShingle Engineering
Robotic micromanipulation
Single cell manipulation
Image processing
Visual servo control
Cui, Shuai
Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
description Rotation control of single biological cells is an essential part of several cell surgery applications. It is the starting point for the subsequent analysis. Under a microscope with limited vision and space, biological cells sometimes need to be rotated correctly to make certain cellular structures observable or ready for the following operations. Manual manipulation usually lacks accuracy, stability, and efficiency, even aided with devices like the motorized micromanipulator. Several methods and techniques for robotic cell rotation control are developed and elaborated in this research to address the aforementioned limitations and problems. In biology laboratories and fertility centers, glass capillary micropipette is the most commonly used end-effector for manipulating biological cells. Its tip is commonly required to be aligned with the target object and the platform in relevant applications. The first robotic micromanipulation method that addresses the misalignment caused by the improper incline angle at which the micropipette is held is presented in this thesis. This misalignment error can be accurately identified and eliminated effectively and precisely by the designed vision-guided robotic micromanipulation system. The alignment of the micropipette lays the foundation for further micromanipulation, like rotation, injection, and transfer of biological cells. It guarantees the maneuverability of the proposed cell micromanipulation methods and can reduce the risk of causing unwanted trauma to the cell throughout the operation. Experiment results confirmed that the robotic controller has better efficiency and precision than the traditional manual operation. A friction force-based micromanipulation cell rotation control method is explored and analyzed. Taking mouse embryos as an example, corresponding force models of the embryo while being rotated are established to identify the key parameters for generating the effective rotation in a deterministic way. The operation process is stable and the designed controller is easy to implement with good rotation accuracy. It averagely achieved a rotational precision of one degree in the experiment. Developed and deployed on the standard clinical setups, this method can directly contribute to automating the operation procedures of relevant applications with improved repeatability and stability. Considering the requirement for the rotation precision is not strict in practical applications like embryo biopsy, a hydrodynamic force-based cell rotation method is proposed and developed. By tuning the flow rate of the fluid from the micropipette orifice, the generated torque can always guarantee an effective cell rotation. Although uncertainty seems everywhere at the micro scale, the validated method developed on the basis of the simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation (SPSA) method for cell in-plane rotation control provides insight into designing controllers for micromanipulation tasks without full knowledge of the system model. Accepting the rotation error no larger than five degrees, results of experiments conducted on mouse oocytes show that the cell can be oriented to the target position with better robustness and a higher success rate (91.7%). Embryo biopsy is taken as an example to rethink and discuss how to apply the proposed cell rotation methods and other related techniques in real applications. An optimized embryo rotation strategy, where the embryo out-of-plane rotation and in-plane rotation are primarily completed by the friction and hydrodynamic force-based method, respectively. Experiment results well suggested the feasibility of the optimized strategy with an overall success rate of 92%. Meanwhile, an image processing system built on the basis of U-Net is developed for selecting the optimal dissection position in the zona pellucida (ZP). The system is proven reliable as it effectively indicated the optimal dissection position in the ZP with a success rate of 95.6%. Based on all experiment results and associated analysis, the methods and techniques introduced in this research exhibit promising potential for future applications.
author2 Ang Wei Tech
author_facet Ang Wei Tech
Cui, Shuai
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Cui, Shuai
author_sort Cui, Shuai
title Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
title_short Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
title_full Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
title_fullStr Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
title_full_unstemmed Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
title_sort vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173852
_version_ 1800916354964914176
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1738522024-04-09T03:58:57Z Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control Cui, Shuai Ang Wei Tech School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Robotics Research Centre WTAng@ntu.edu.sg Engineering Robotic micromanipulation Single cell manipulation Image processing Visual servo control Rotation control of single biological cells is an essential part of several cell surgery applications. It is the starting point for the subsequent analysis. Under a microscope with limited vision and space, biological cells sometimes need to be rotated correctly to make certain cellular structures observable or ready for the following operations. Manual manipulation usually lacks accuracy, stability, and efficiency, even aided with devices like the motorized micromanipulator. Several methods and techniques for robotic cell rotation control are developed and elaborated in this research to address the aforementioned limitations and problems. In biology laboratories and fertility centers, glass capillary micropipette is the most commonly used end-effector for manipulating biological cells. Its tip is commonly required to be aligned with the target object and the platform in relevant applications. The first robotic micromanipulation method that addresses the misalignment caused by the improper incline angle at which the micropipette is held is presented in this thesis. This misalignment error can be accurately identified and eliminated effectively and precisely by the designed vision-guided robotic micromanipulation system. The alignment of the micropipette lays the foundation for further micromanipulation, like rotation, injection, and transfer of biological cells. It guarantees the maneuverability of the proposed cell micromanipulation methods and can reduce the risk of causing unwanted trauma to the cell throughout the operation. Experiment results confirmed that the robotic controller has better efficiency and precision than the traditional manual operation. A friction force-based micromanipulation cell rotation control method is explored and analyzed. Taking mouse embryos as an example, corresponding force models of the embryo while being rotated are established to identify the key parameters for generating the effective rotation in a deterministic way. The operation process is stable and the designed controller is easy to implement with good rotation accuracy. It averagely achieved a rotational precision of one degree in the experiment. Developed and deployed on the standard clinical setups, this method can directly contribute to automating the operation procedures of relevant applications with improved repeatability and stability. Considering the requirement for the rotation precision is not strict in practical applications like embryo biopsy, a hydrodynamic force-based cell rotation method is proposed and developed. By tuning the flow rate of the fluid from the micropipette orifice, the generated torque can always guarantee an effective cell rotation. Although uncertainty seems everywhere at the micro scale, the validated method developed on the basis of the simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation (SPSA) method for cell in-plane rotation control provides insight into designing controllers for micromanipulation tasks without full knowledge of the system model. Accepting the rotation error no larger than five degrees, results of experiments conducted on mouse oocytes show that the cell can be oriented to the target position with better robustness and a higher success rate (91.7%). Embryo biopsy is taken as an example to rethink and discuss how to apply the proposed cell rotation methods and other related techniques in real applications. An optimized embryo rotation strategy, where the embryo out-of-plane rotation and in-plane rotation are primarily completed by the friction and hydrodynamic force-based method, respectively. Experiment results well suggested the feasibility of the optimized strategy with an overall success rate of 92%. Meanwhile, an image processing system built on the basis of U-Net is developed for selecting the optimal dissection position in the zona pellucida (ZP). The system is proven reliable as it effectively indicated the optimal dissection position in the ZP with a success rate of 95.6%. Based on all experiment results and associated analysis, the methods and techniques introduced in this research exhibit promising potential for future applications. Doctor of Philosophy 2024-03-06T00:50:28Z 2024-03-06T00:50:28Z 2024 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Cui, S. (2024). Vision-guided robotic micromanipulation for cell rotation control. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173852 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173852 10.32657/10356/173852 en NGF-2017-03-016 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University