Abstract:Surgical Video Question Answering (VideoQA) requires accurate temporal grounding while remaining robust to natural variation in how clinicians phrase questions, where linguistic bias can arise. Standard Parameter Efficient Fine Tuning (PEFT) methods adapt pretrained projections without explicitly modeling frame-to-frame interactions within the adaptation pathway, limiting their ability to exploit sparse temporal evidence. We introduce TemporalDoRA, a video-specific PEFT formulation that extends Weight-Decomposed Low-Rank Adaptation by (i) inserting lightweight temporal Multi-Head Attention (MHA) inside the low-rank bottleneck of the vision encoder and (ii) selectively applying weight decomposition only to the trainable low-rank branch rather than the full adapted weight. This design enables temporally-aware updates while preserving a frozen backbone and stable scaling. By mixing information across frames within the adaptation subspace, TemporalDoRA steers updates toward temporally consistent visual cues and improves robustness with minimal parameter overhead. To benchmark this setting, we present REAL-Colon-VQA, a colonoscopy VideoQA dataset with 6,424 clip--question pairs, including paired rephrased Out-of-Template questions to evaluate sensitivity to linguistic variation. TemporalDoRA improves Out-of-Template performance, and ablation studies confirm that temporal mixing inside the low-rank branch is the primary driver of these gains. We also validate on EndoVis18-VQA adapted to short clips and observe consistent improvements on the Out-of-Template split. Code and dataset available at~\href{https://anonymous.4open.science/r/TemporalDoRA-BFC8/}{Anonymous GitHub}.
Abstract:Deep learning has the potential to improve colonoscopy by enabling 3D reconstruction of the colon, providing a comprehensive view of mucosal surfaces and lesions, and facilitating the identification of unexplored areas. However, the development of robust methods is limited by the scarcity of large-scale ground truth data. We propose RealSynCol, a highly realistic synthetic dataset designed to replicate the endoscopic environment. Colon geometries extracted from 10 CT scans were imported into a virtual environment that closely mimics intraoperative conditions and rendered with realistic vascular textures. The resulting dataset comprises 28\,130 frames, paired with ground truth depth maps, optical flow, 3D meshes, and camera trajectories. A benchmark study was conducted to evaluate the available synthetic colon datasets for the tasks of depth and pose estimation. Results demonstrate that the high realism and variability of RealSynCol significantly enhance generalization performance on clinical images, proving it to be a powerful tool for developing deep learning algorithms to support endoscopic diagnosis.




Abstract:Robotic-assisted surgery (RAS) relies on accurate depth estimation for 3D reconstruction and visualization. While foundation models like Depth Anything Models (DAM) show promise, directly applying them to surgery often yields suboptimal results. Fully fine-tuning on limited surgical data can cause overfitting and catastrophic forgetting, compromising model robustness and generalization. Although Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) addresses some adaptation issues, its uniform parameter distribution neglects the inherent feature hierarchy, where earlier layers, learning more general features, require more parameters than later ones. To tackle this issue, we introduce Depth Anything in Robotic Endoscopic Surgery (DARES), a novel approach that employs a new adaptation technique, Vector Low-Rank Adaptation (Vector-LoRA) on the DAM V2 to perform self-supervised monocular depth estimation in RAS scenes. To enhance learning efficiency, we introduce Vector-LoRA by integrating more parameters in earlier layers and gradually decreasing parameters in later layers. We also design a reprojection loss based on the multi-scale SSIM error to enhance depth perception by better tailoring the foundation model to the specific requirements of the surgical environment. The proposed method is validated on the SCARED dataset and demonstrates superior performance over recent state-of-the-art self-supervised monocular depth estimation techniques, achieving an improvement of 13.3% in the absolute relative error metric. The code and pre-trained weights are available at https://github.com/mobarakol/DARES.