Prospective, randomized assessment of transfer of training (ToT) and transfer effectiveness ratio (TER) of virtual reality simulation training for laparoscopic skill acquisition
- PMID: 23426342
- DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e318284f658
Prospective, randomized assessment of transfer of training (ToT) and transfer effectiveness ratio (TER) of virtual reality simulation training for laparoscopic skill acquisition
Abstract
Objectives: We assessed the effectiveness of ToT from VR laparoscopic simulation training in 2 studies. In a second study, we also assessed the TER. ToT is a detectable performance improvement between equivalent groups, and TER is the observed percentage performance differences between 2 matched groups carrying out the same task but with 1 group pretrained on VR simulation. Concordance between simulated and in-vivo procedure performance was also assessed.
Design: Prospective, randomized, and blinded.
Participants: In Study 1, experienced laparoscopic surgeons (n = 195) and in Study 2 laparoscopic novices (n = 30) were randomized to either train on VR simulation before completing an equivalent real-world task or complete the real-world task only.
Results: Experienced laparoscopic surgeons and novices who trained on the simulator performed significantly better than their controls, thus demonstrating ToT. Their performance showed a TER between 7% and 42% from the virtual to the real tasks. Simulation training impacted most on procedural error reduction in both studies (32-42%). The correlation observed between the VR and real-world task performance was r > 0·96 (Study 2).
Conclusions: VR simulation training offers a powerful and effective platform for training safer skills.
Comment in
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Response to Drs Ausania and Gallagher.Ann Surg. 2015 Jul;262(1):e35-6. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000000436. Ann Surg. 2015. PMID: 24368647 No abstract available.
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Prospective, Randomized Assessment of Transfer of Training (ToT) and Transfer Effectiveness Ratio (TER) of Virtual Reality Simulation Training for Laparoscopic Skill Acquisition.Ann Surg. 2015 Jul;262(1):e33-4. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000000723. Ann Surg. 2015. PMID: 26061214 No abstract available.
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