A University of Virginia engineering professor imagines a day when people living in small towns far from big hospitals can get life-saving operations performed, in part, by a robot surgeon that does the cutting and stitching.
And the National Science Foundation thinks Homa Alemzadeh might be on to something, so it is giving her $550,000 over five years to innovate robotic surgery.
Alemzadeh is an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Âé¶ąĆĆ˝â°ć School of Engineering and Applied Science, and she has earned one of the science foundation’s sought-after CAREER awards to make robotic surgery safer and more intuitive for physicians.
Her vision is that a human doctor, of course, would oversee the entire process, with the robot surgeon acting as the physician’s high-tech assistant. But this kind of doctor-robot partnership could extend to rural areas the kinds of surgery now generally performed only in major medical centers.
“Human experts are the final decision-makers,” Alemzadeh said. “We seek to transfer their knowledge and expertise to the model and mechanisms we are designing, so that the system provides them with just-in-time and explainable feedback in response to every command.”
Alemzadeh works in a discipline engineers call “cyber-physical systems,” which means figuring out how machines and people can best work together.

