Effect of Artificial Intelligence Tutoring vs Expert Instruction on Learning Simulated Surgical Skills Among Medical Students
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital · McGill University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
To better understand the emerging role of artificial intelligence (AI) in surgical training, efficacy of AI tutoring systems, such as the Virtual Operative Assistant (VOA), must be tested and compared with conventional approaches.
To determine how VOA and remote expert instruction compare in learners' skill acquisition, affective, and cognitive outcomes during surgical simulation training. Design, Setting, and Participants: This instructor-blinded randomized clinical trial included medical students (undergraduate years 0-2) from 4 institutions in Canada during a single simulation training at McGill Neurosurgical Simulation and Artificial Intelligence Learning Centre, Montreal, Canada. Cross-sectional data were collected from January to April 2021. Analysis was conducted based on intention-to-treat. Data were analyzed from April to June 2021. Interventions: The interventions included 5 feedback sessions, 5 minutes each, during a single 75-minute training, including 5 practice sessions followed by 1 realistic virtual reality brain tumor resection. The 3 intervention arms included 2 treatment groups, AI audiovisual metric-based feedback (VOA group) and synchronous verbal scripted debriefing and instruction from a remote expert (instructor group), and a control group that received no feedback. Main Outcomes and Measures: The coprimary outcomes were change in procedural performance, quantified as Expertise Score by a validated assessment algorithm (Intelligent Continuous Expertise Monitoring System [ICEMS]; range, -1.00 to 1.00) for each practice resection, and learning and retention, measured from performance in realistic resections by ICEMS and blinded Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills (OSATS; range 1-7). Secondary outcomes included strength of emotions before, during, and after the intervention and cognitive load after intervention, measured in self-reports.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
12- AMAli M. FazlollahiCorresponding
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University, McGill University Health Centre
- MBMohamad Bakhaidar
McGill University, King Abdulaziz University, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
- AAAhmad Alsayegh
King Abdulaziz University, McGill University, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
- RYRecai Yilmaz
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University Health Centre, McGill University
- AWAlexander Winkler-Schwartz
McGill University, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Debriefing
- Psychological intervention
- Dreyfus model of skill acquisition
- Virtual reality
- Randomized controlled trial
- Intervention (counseling)
- Procedural knowledge
- Medical education
- Quality Education