Gaze behavior is related to objective technical skills assessment during virtual reality simulator-based surgical training: a proof of concept

Archive ouverte

Galuret, Soline | Vallée, Nicolas | Tronchot, Alexandre | Thomazeau, Herve | Jannin, Pierre | Huaulmé, Arnaud

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. PurposeSimulation-based training allows surgical skills to be learned safely. Most virtual reality-based surgical simulators address technical skills without considering non-technical skills, such as gaze use. In this study, we investigated surgeons' visual behavior during virtual reality-based surgical training where visual guidance is provided. Our hypothesis was that the gaze distribution in the environment is correlated with the simulator's technical skills assessment.MethodsWe recorded 25 surgical training sessions on an arthroscopic simulator. Trainees were equipped with a head-mounted eye-tracking device. A U-net was trained on two sessions to segment three simulator-specific areas of interest (AoI) and the background, to quantify gaze distribution. We tested whether the percentage of gazes in those areas was correlated with the simulator's scores.ResultsThe neural network was able to segment all AoI with a mean Intersection over Union superior to 94% for each area. The gaze percentage in the AoI differed among trainees. Despite several sources of data loss, we found significant correlations between gaze position and the simulator scores. For instance, trainees obtained better procedural scores when their gaze focused on the virtual assistance (Spearman correlation test, N = 7, r = 0.800, p = 0.031).ConclusionOur findings suggest that visual behavior should be quantified for assessing surgical expertise in simulation-based training environments, especially when visual guidance is provided. Ultimately visual behavior could be used to quantitatively assess surgeons' learning curve and expertise while training on VR simulators, in a way that complements existing metrics.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Virtual reality-based simulation improves rotator cuff repair skill: a randomized transfer validity study

Archive ouverte | Vallée, Nicolas | CCSD

International audience. Background: Although virtual reality (VR) simulators have demonstrated their efficiency for basic technical skill training of healthcare professionals, validation for more complex and sequent...

Stand-up straight!: human pose estimation to evaluate postural skills during orthopedic surgery simulations

Archive ouverte | Casy, Tiphaine | CCSD

International audience. Purpose Surgery simulators can be used to learn technical and non-technical skills and, to analyse posture. Ergonomic skill can be automatically detected with a Human Pose Estimation algorith...

The influence of virtual reality simulation on surgical residents' heart rate during an assessment of arthroscopic technical skills: a prospective, paired observational study

Archive ouverte | Tronchot, Alexandre | CCSD

International audience. Hypothesis: To demonstrate that a virtual reality (VR) simulation training program reduces heart rate variability during an assessment of surgical trainees' technical skills in arthroscopy.St...

Chargement des enrichissements...