The HARMS-Lab Human-Centred Paradigm
What we do
Our Human-Centred paradigm is based on the following first principles:
- Patient- and surgeon-specific methodologies with the aim to minimize and eventually eliminate invasiveness, optimise outcome, improve ergonomics and promote personalisation.
- Frugal innovation to provide affordable robotic surgery capabilities, allow infrastructure re-purposing and negligible theatre footprint.
- Perceptually-enabled functionalities to improve ergonomics, reduce mental fatigue, facilitate automation and increase safety in the operating theatre.
We aim to
- Develop enabling technologies that introduce radical change, augment performance and capabilities by making robotic surgery attainable and accessible.
- Introduce disruptive innovation that pushes the boundaries by proposing new paradigms in minimally invasive surgery.
- Deliver solutions that are open to adoption and adaptation to a wide range of applications, in and out of clinical settings.
Why it is important
A significant part of the HARMS Lab work stems from the desire to disrupt the oligarchical status quo of the robotic surgery market, democratise and accelerate robotic surgery adoption. This will be achieved by giving smaller hospitals and poorer health systems the opportunity to adopt robotic technology or even develop it and customize it in-house.
Tabs - Funders / Etc
Projects
- CYCLOPS: A universal robotic attachment for Endoscopic Submucosal Dissection (ESD)
- EndoDrone: A universal endoscopic attachment for detection of gastrointestinal dysplasia
- SmartOR: A perceptually-enabled operating room
- μCYCLOPS: A hybrid manual or robotic microsurgery tool with a focus on neurosurgery
- GaGARoS: A Gaze-Guided Assistive Robotic System, for Daily-Living Activities
PhD Students
- Saina Akhond
- Fernando Avila-Rencoret
- Ravi Naik
- Mark Runciman
- Ming Zhao
Publications
For a full list of publications please click here.
Our Researchers
Dr George Mylonas

Dr George Mylonas
Lecturer in Robotics and Technology in Cancer
Dr Alexandros Kogkas

Dr Alexandros Kogkas
Research Associate
Dr James Avery

Dr James Avery
Research Associate