Towards Virtual VATS, Face, and Construct Evaluation for Peg Transfer Training of Box, VR, AR, and MR Trainer.
Zhibao QinYonghang TaiChengqi XiaJun PengXiaoqiao HuangZaiqing ChenQiong LiJunsheng ShiPublished in: Journal of healthcare engineering (2019)
The aim of this study is to develop and assess the peg transfer training module face, content and construct validation use of the box, virtual reality (VR), cognitive virtual reality (CVR), augmented reality (AR), and mixed reality (MR) trainer, thereby to compare advantages and disadvantages of these simulators. Training system (VatsSim-XR) design includes customized haptic-enabled thoracoscopic instruments, virtual reality helmet set, endoscope kit with navigation, and the patient-specific corresponding training environment. A cohort of 32 trainees comprising 24 novices and 8 experts underwent the real and virtual simulators that were conducted in the department of thoracic surgery of Yunnan First People's Hospital. Both subjective and objective evaluations have been developed to explore the visual and haptic potential promotions in peg transfer education. Experiments and evaluation results conducted by both professional and novice thoracic surgeons show that the surgery skills from experts are better than novices overall, AR trainer is able to provide a more balanced training environments on visuohaptic fidelity and accuracy, box trainer and MR trainer demonstrated the best realism 3D perception and surgical immersive performance, respectively, and CVR trainer shows a better clinic effect that the traditional VR trainer. Combining these in a systematic approach, tuned with specific fidelity requirements, medical simulation systems would be able to provide a more immersive and effective training environment.
Keyphrases
- virtual reality
- thoracic surgery
- healthcare
- transcription factor
- magnetic resonance
- minimally invasive
- binding protein
- contrast enhanced
- spinal cord
- magnetic resonance imaging
- quality improvement
- risk assessment
- emergency department
- coronary artery disease
- obstructive sleep apnea
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- human health
- coronary artery bypass
- patient reported outcomes
- acute care
- clinical evaluation