Description
Medical students acquire and enhance their clinical skills using various available techniques and resources. As the health care profession has move towards team-based practice, students and trainees need to practice team-based procedures that involve timely management of clinical tasks and adequate communication with other members of the team. Such team-based procedures include surgical and clinical procedures, some of which are protocol-driven. Cost and time required for individual team-based training sessions, along with other factors, contribute to making the training complex and challenging. A great deal of research has been done on medically-focused collaborative virtual reality (VR)-based training for protocol-driven procedures as a cost-effective as well as time-efficient solution. Most VR-based simulators focus on training of individual personnel. The ones which focus on providing team training provide an interactive simulation for only a few scenarios in a collaborative virtual environment (CVE). These simulators are suited for didactic training for cognitive skills development. The training sessions in the simulators require the physical presence of mentors. The problem with this kind of system is that the mentor must be present at the training location (either physically or virtually) to evaluate the performance of the team (or an individual). Another issue is that there is no efficient methodology that exists to provide feedback to the trainees during the training session itself (formative feedback). Furthermore, they lack the ability to provide training in acquisition or improvement of psychomotor skills for the tasks that require force or touch feedback such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). To find a potential solution to overcome some of these concerns, a novel training system was designed and developed that utilizes the integration of sensors into a CVE for time-critical medical procedures. The system allows the participants to simultaneously access the CVE and receive training from geographically diverse locations. The system is also able to provide real-time feedback and is also able to store important data during each training/testing session. Finally, this study also presents a generalizable collaborative team-training system that can be used across various team-based procedures in medical as well as non-medical domains.
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Details
Title
- Design, development and evaluation of collaborative team training method in virtual worlds for time-critical medical procedures
Contributors
- Khanal, Prabal (Author)
- Greenes, Robert (Thesis advisor)
- Patel, Vimla (Thesis advisor)
- Smith, Marshall (Committee member)
- Gupta, Ashish (Committee member)
- Kaufman, David (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2014
Subjects
- Health education
- Information Technology
- pedagogy
- Advanced Cardiac Life Support
- Collaborative Virtual Environment
- Medical education
- Serious Games
- Virtual Reality
- VR-based Medical Education
- Simulated environment (Teaching method)
- Shared virtual environments
- Virtual work teams
- Virtual reality in education--Simulation methods.
- Virtual reality in education
- Virtual reality in medicine--Simulation methods.
- Virtual reality in medicine
- Emergency medicine--Simulation methods.
- Emergency medicine
- Critical care medicine--Simulation methods.
- Critical care medicine
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
- thesisPartial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2014
- bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references (p. 120-127)
- Field of study: Biomedical informatics
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Prabal Khanal