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Eye-tracking glasses reveal the learning process

Professor develops new method that determines how novice medical students learn

Date:
September 21, 2015
Source:
Queen's University
Summary:
Using eye-tracking glasses, a professor has developed a new method to determine how novice medical students learn compared to more experienced medical professionals.
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Using eye-tracking glasses, Queen's University professor Adam Szulewski (Emergency Medicine) has developed a new method to determine how novice medical students learn compared to more experienced medical professionals.

"Many traditional assessment strategies in medical education rely on tabulating learners' scores in order to obtain grades," says Dr. Szulewski. "In the real world, medical learners are faced with the need to make many decisions in a short time period, which increases their cognitive load and puts a strain on working memory. We have shown that we can now measure cognitive load in an unobtrusive way during medical assessments."

For the study, Dr. Szulewski recruited 10 novice medicine trainees and 10 trained physicians and outfitted them with eye-tracking glasses to assess changes in pupil diameter during a test. Changes in pupil size correlate with changes in cognitive processing demands. It was revealed novices expend more mental effort than experts when answering medical questions -- which is true even when both the novices and the experts answer the same question correctly.

"These results are preliminary still, but have implications for optimal assessment strategies in medical testing," says Dr. Szulewski. "This is especially true in the new era of competency-based medical education where trainees are required to demonstrate competence in particular skills before they move forward in their training."

Dr. Szulewski is continuing his research and evaluating cognitive load and expert versus novice performance in simulated as well as real world resuscitation scenarios. This new research will continue to enhance understanding of decision-making in medicine.

The research was published in Academic Medicine.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Queen's University. Original written by Anne Craig. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Adam Szulewski, Nathan Roth, Daniel Howes. The Use of Task-Evoked Pupillary Response as an Objective Measure of Cognitive Load in Novices and Trained Physicians. Academic Medicine, 2015; 90 (7): 981 DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000677

Cite This Page:

Queen's University. "Eye-tracking glasses reveal the learning process." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 21 September 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150921133827.htm>.
Queen's University. (2015, September 21). Eye-tracking glasses reveal the learning process. ScienceDaily. Retrieved November 14, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150921133827.htm
Queen's University. "Eye-tracking glasses reveal the learning process." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150921133827.htm (accessed November 14, 2024).

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