Abstract:Surgical Scene Graphs abstract the complexity of surgical operating rooms (OR) into a structure of entities and their relations, but existing paradigms suffer from strictly dyadic structural limitations. Frameworks that predominantly rely on pairwise message passing or tokenized sequences flatten the manifold geometry inherent to relational structures and lose structure in the process. We introduce TopoOR, a new paradigm that models multimodal operating rooms as a higher-order structure, innately preserving pairwise and group relationships. By lifting interactions between entities into higher-order topological cells, TopoOR natively models complex dynamics and multimodality present in the OR. This topological representation subsumes traditional scene graphs, thereby offering strictly greater expressivity. We also propose a higher-order attention mechanism that explicitly preserves manifold structure and modality-specific features throughout hierarchical relational attention. In this way, we circumvent combining 3D geometry, audio, and robot kinematics into a single joint latent representation, preserving the precise multimodal structure required for safety-critical reasoning, unlike existing methods. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our approach outperforms traditional graph and LLM-based baselines across sterility breach detection, robot phase prediction, and next-action anticipation
Abstract:Reliable recognition and localization of surgical instruments in endoscopic video recordings are foundational for a wide range of applications in computer- and robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery (RAMIS), including surgical training, skill assessment, and autonomous assistance. However, robust performance under real-world conditions remains a significant challenge. Incorporating surgical context - such as the current procedural phase - has emerged as a promising strategy to improve robustness and interpretability. To address these challenges, we organized the Surgical Procedure Phase, Keypoint, and Instrument Recognition (PhaKIR) sub-challenge as part of the Endoscopic Vision (EndoVis) challenge at MICCAI 2024. We introduced a novel, multi-center dataset comprising thirteen full-length laparoscopic cholecystectomy videos collected from three distinct medical institutions, with unified annotations for three interrelated tasks: surgical phase recognition, instrument keypoint estimation, and instrument instance segmentation. Unlike existing datasets, ours enables joint investigation of instrument localization and procedural context within the same data while supporting the integration of temporal information across entire procedures. We report results and findings in accordance with the BIAS guidelines for biomedical image analysis challenges. The PhaKIR sub-challenge advances the field by providing a unique benchmark for developing temporally aware, context-driven methods in RAMIS and offers a high-quality resource to support future research in surgical scene understanding.