Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4280062 The American Journal of Surgery 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundAlthough surgeons perform procedures and tasks under a significant amount of cognitive load, current simulators focus on training psychomotor skills in isolation. This may limit the transfer of learned skills to actual surgical environments.MethodsVisuohaptic simulations were created that required participants to hone psychomotor skills in the presence of cognitive load. A control group (n = 7) trained on conventional skills simulator and their performance was compared with the experimental group (n = 7) in terms of learning curves and performance on a transfer task.ResultsThe experimental group performed significantly better than the control group in terms of both learning curves and performance on the transfer task.ConclusionsSimulations that combine psychomotor and cognitive skills training are more effective than simulators that focus on psychomotor skills in isolation.

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