| Literature DB >> 30320127 |
Juan Claudio Gutierrez1, Steven D Holladay2, Boaz Arzi3, Marcelo Gomez4, Rachel Pollard3, Patricia Youngblood5, Sakti Srivastava6.
Abstract
There is currently limited available information, but growing interest, in possible relationships between spatial visualization skills in medical students and their academic performance in select areas of the curriculum such as radiographic interpretation and anatomy. There is very limited comparable information on how entry-level spatial visualization skills may correlate with macroscopic anatomy performance in veterinary medical students exposed to an integrated curriculum. The present study made use of a battery of two short tests that measure spatial ability: Guay's visualization of views test (VVT) and mental rotation test (MRT) and, one test that measures general non-verbal reasoning abilities: Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices Test, short form (APMT). Tests were given to 1st-year veterinary medical students (n = 124) immediately before commencing the integrated veterinary medical curriculum. Results show there is a positive correlation between entry-level spatial ability and non-verbal general reasoning scores confirming these abilities are linked (r: +0.22 and +0.3 for VVT/APMT and MRT/APMT respectively). The dispersion and inconsistency of significant positive correlation between anatomy practical exams grade and spatial and general reasoning scores suggest these abilities either do not correlate with anatomy practical exams grade or, are overcome with progression through the anatomy courses. Males scored higher than females in the spatial ability tests: 16.59 vs. 12.06 for VVT (p = 0.01) and 19.0 vs. 14.68 for MRT (p = 0.01). Scores for APMT did not show a significant difference by gender.Entities:
Keywords: anatomy; curriculum; non-verbal reasoning ability; spatial ability; veterinary anatomy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30320127 PMCID: PMC6167549 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Mean ± SEM of female and male performance for the 3 tests of spatial and general reasoning abilities.
| Entry-level score for females ( | 12.06 ± 0.52 Median: 11.5 | 14.68 ± 0.73 Median: 14.5 | 7.55 ± 0.23 Median: 8 |
| Entry-level score for males ( | 16.59 ± 1.93 | 19.00 ± 3.82 | 7.11 ± 0.6 Median: 7 |
p < 0.05.
Spearman's GVVT or MRT performance, and APMT test scores.
| Whole group ( | +0.22 | +0.3 |
| Females ( | +0.27 | +0.41 |
| Males ( | +0.33 | +0.03 |
Spearman's entry-level spatial and general reasoning test results and performance on veterinary anatomy practical exams.
| Whole group ( |
VVT/Musculoskeletal midterm = +0.12 VVT/Neuroscience-senses-behavior midterm = +0.12 VVT/Cardiovascular-respiratory final = +0.25 VVT/Endocrinology-reproduction final = +0.10 APMT/Neuroscience-senses-behavior midterm = +0.12 |
| Females ( |
VVT/Musculoskeletal midterm = +0.16 VVT/Cardiovascular-respiratory final = +0.25 |
| Males ( |
VVT/Neuroscience-senses-behavior midterm = +0.40 VVT/Cardiovascular-respiratory final = +0.32 VVT/Endocrinology-reproduction final = +0.14 MRT Endocrinology-reproduction final = +0.22 APMT/Neuroscience-senses-behavior midterm = +0.56 APMT / Cardiovascular-respiratory final = +0.55 |