Author of the publication

Establishing multimodal telepresence sessions using the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and advanced haptic codecs.

, , , and . HAPTICS, page 321-325. IEEE Computer Society, (2010)

Please choose a person to relate this publication to

To differ between persons with the same name, the academic degree and the title of an important publication will be displayed. You can also use the button next to the name to display some publications already assigned to the person.

 

Other publications of authors with the same name

Experimental evaluation of guidance and forbidden region virtual fixtures for object telemanipulation., and . IROS, page 4346-4353. IEEE, (2014)Robustness of the Unscented Kalman filter for state and parameter estimation in an elastic transmission., , and . Robotics: Science and Systems, The MIT Press, (2009)Acceleration compensation for vehicle based telesurgery on earth or in space., , , and . IROS, page 1459-1464. IEEE, (2008)Plugfest 2009: Global interoperability in Telerobotics and telemedicine., , , , , , , , , and 9 other author(s). ICRA, page 1733-1738. IEEE, (2010)Effects of thermal protection methods on haptic perception., , , and . World Haptics, page 143-148. IEEE Computer Society, (2011)Perceptual thresholds for single vs. Multi-Finger Haptic interaction., , and . HAPTICS, page 95-99. IEEE Computer Society, (2010)Portable surgery master station for mobile robotic telesurgery., , , , , , and . ROBOCOMM, volume 318 of ACM International Conference Proceeding Series, page 28. ICST/ACM, (2007)The RAVEN: Design and Validation of a Telesurgery System., , , , , , , , and . I. J. Robotics Res., 28 (9): 1183-1197 (2009)Establishing multimodal telepresence sessions using the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and advanced haptic codecs., , , and . HAPTICS, page 321-325. IEEE Computer Society, (2010)Teleoperation of a Surgical Robot Via Airborne Wireless Radio and Transatlantic Internet Links., , , , , , , , and . FSR, volume 42 of Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics, page 305-314. Springer, (2007)