Stephan Dreiseitl1, Maja Pivec, Michael Binder. 1. Department of Software Engineering, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, Hagenberg, Austria. Stephan.Dreiseitl@fh-hagenberg.at
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To use computer-based eye tracking technology to record and evaluate examination characteristics of the diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions. METHODOLOGY: 16 study participants with varying levels of diagnostic expertise (little, intermediate, superior) were recorded while diagnosing a series of 28 digital images of pigmented skin lesions, obtained by non-invasive digital dermatoscopy, on a computer screen. Eye tracking hardware recorded the gaze track and fixations of the physicians while they examined the lesion images. Analysis of variance was used to test for differences in examination characteristics between physicians grouped according to expertise. RESULTS: There were no significant differences between physicians with little and intermediate levels of expertise in terms of average time until diagnosis (6.61 vs. 6.19s), gaze track length (6.65 vs. 6.15 kilopixels), number of fixations (23.1 vs. 19.1), and time in fixations (4.91 vs. 4.17s). The experts were significantly different with 3.17s time until diagnosis, 4.53 kilopixels gaze track length, 9.9 fixations, and 1.74s in fixations, respectively. Differentiation between benign and malignant lesions had no effect on examination measurements. CONCLUSION: The results show that experience level has a significant impact on the way in which lesion images are examined. This finding can be used to construct decision support systems that employ important diagnostic features identified by experts, and to optimize teaching for less experienced physicians. Copyright Â
OBJECTIVE: To use computer-based eye tracking technology to record and evaluate examination characteristics of the diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions. METHODOLOGY: 16 study participants with varying levels of diagnostic expertise (little, intermediate, superior) were recorded while diagnosing a series of 28 digital images of pigmented skin lesions, obtained by non-invasive digital dermatoscopy, on a computer screen. Eye tracking hardware recorded the gaze track and fixations of the physicians while they examined the lesion images. Analysis of variance was used to test for differences in examination characteristics between physicians grouped according to expertise. RESULTS: There were no significant differences between physicians with little and intermediate levels of expertise in terms of average time until diagnosis (6.61 vs. 6.19s), gaze track length (6.65 vs. 6.15 kilopixels), number of fixations (23.1 vs. 19.1), and time in fixations (4.91 vs. 4.17s). The experts were significantly different with 3.17s time until diagnosis, 4.53 kilopixels gaze track length, 9.9 fixations, and 1.74s in fixations, respectively. Differentiation between benign and malignant lesions had no effect on examination measurements. CONCLUSION: The results show that experience level has a significant impact on the way in which lesion images are examined. This finding can be used to construct decision support systems that employ important diagnostic features identified by experts, and to optimize teaching for less experienced physicians. Copyright Â
Authors: Kevin K John; Jakob D Jensen; Andy J King; Manusheela Pokharel; Douglas Grossman Journal: J Dermatol Sci Date: 2018-04-06 Impact factor: 4.563
Authors: Stephanie Brams; Ignace T C Hooge; Gal Ziv; Siska Dauwe; Ken Evens; Tony De Wolf; Oron Levin; Johan Wagemans; Werner F Helsen Journal: PLoS One Date: 2018-11-21 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Colin R Bell; Adam Szulewski; Melanie Walker; Conor McKaigney; Graeme Ross; Louise Rang; Joseph Newbigging; John Kendall Journal: AEM Educ Train Date: 2020-02-28