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Scene-dependent, feedforward eye gaze metrics can differentiate technical skill levels of trainees in laparoscopic surgery

Authors :
Chaitanya S. Kulkarni
Shiyu Deng
Tianzi Wang
Jacob Hartman-Kenzler
Laura E. Barnes
Sarah Henrickson Parker
Shawn D. Safford
Nathan Lau
Source :
Surgical endoscopy.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

In laparoscopic surgery, looking in the target areas is an indicator of proficiency. However, gaze behaviors revealing feedforward control (i.e., looking ahead) and their importance have been under-investigated in surgery. This study aims to establish the sensitivity and relative importance of different scene-dependent gaze and motion metrics for estimating trainee proficiency levels in surgical skills.Medical students performed the Fundamentals of Laparoscopic Surgery peg transfer task while recording their gaze on the monitor and tool activities inside the trainer box. Using computer vision and fixation algorithms, five scene-dependent gaze metrics and one tool speed metric were computed for 499 practice trials. Cluster analysis on the six metrics was used to group the trials into different clusters/proficiency levels, and ANOVAs were conducted to test differences between proficiency levels. A Random Forest model was trained to study metric importance at predicting proficiency levels.Three clusters were identified, corresponding to three proficiency levels. The correspondence between the clusters and proficiency levels was confirmed by differences between completion times (FScene-dependent gaze metrics revealed skill levels of trainees more precisely than between experts and novices as suggested in the literature. Further, feedforward gaze metrics appeared to be more important than feedback ones at predicting proficiency.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery

Details

ISSN :
14322218
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgical endoscopy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c7080503c0b8b8e5370739ce9c1e7806