| Literature DB >> 32193612 |
Abstract
Virtual Reality (VR) is being integrated into many different areas of our lives, from industrial engineering to video-games, and also including teaching and education. We have several examples where VR has been used to engage students and facilitate their 3D spatial understanding, but can VR help also teachers? What are the benefits teachers can obtain on using VR applications? In this paper we present an application (VR4Health) designed to allow students to directly inspect 3D models of several human organs by using Virtual Reality systems. The application is designed to be used in an HMD device autonomously as a self-learning tool and also reports information to teachers in order that he/she becomes aware of what the students do and can redirect his/her work to the concrete necessities of the student. We evaluate both the students' and the teachers' perception by doing an experiment and asking them to fill-in a questionnaire at the end of the experiment.Entities:
Keywords: Health sciences; Nursing; Self-learning; Virtual reality
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32193612 PMCID: PMC7082407 DOI: 10.1007/s10916-020-01550-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Syst ISSN: 0148-5598 Impact factor: 4.460
Fig. 1Example of two labeled models: a Heart. b Brain
Description of models and their animations
| Colored arrows indicating the direction and kind of blood. Animated | |
| (by | blue or red |
| Animation separating the layers showing all the different parts. | |
| Colored different sections. Animation simulating sound into the ear. | |
| Visualization of arteries and veins. Semitransparent view of skin and | |
| (by | bones. |
| Adding liver, pancreas and gallbladder. Animation showing the | |
| (by | exocrine and endocrine secretion and the pancreatic circulation. |
| Animation and a zoomed vision of an alveol. Colored blue and red | |
| (by | arrows simulating blood. Animation simulating the air into the lungs. |
| Possible division in colored parts. Show separately ventricular system, | |
| (by | basal ganglia and nervous system. |
Questions for categories 1 and 2
| Category 1. Ease of use: | |
| Q1.1 | The use of a Head Mounted Display (HMD) has been comfortable? |
| Q1.2 | The use of the VIVE hand controller has been easy? |
| Q1.3 | The navigation through the structures menu has been intuitive? |
| Category 2. Self-learning usage: | |
| Q2.1 | By using VR, do you understand better the anatomical structures? |
| Q2.2 | By using VR, do you understand better the relative position of the different structures in the body? |
| Q2.3 | By using VR, have you been more motivated than using traditional study? |
| Q2.4 | The anatomical models you have inspect in VR4Health are a good support material for the human anatomy course? |
| Q2.5 | Would you use VR4Health as a support material for your classes? |
Questions for category 3
| Category 3. Teacher helping usage: | |
| Q3.1 - How do you prefer to use VR4Health? (2 max. answers ordered) | |
| 1) | Individually with teacher support online |
| 2) | Individually without teacher support online |
| 3) | In group of students with teacher support online |
| 4) | In group of students without teacher support online |
| 5) | Individually with teacher support presentially |
| 6) | In group of students with teacher support presentially |
| Q3.2 - With respect to the time of use, do you prefer an open time (no limit) or having a time limit proposed by the teacher? Why? | |
| 1) | Without limits |
| 2) | With limits |
| 3) | Both options |
| Q3.3 - Do you prefer a predefined and guided inspection through the anatomical structure or do you prefer the student freely deciding it? | |
| 1) | Defined |
| 2) | Free |
| 3) | Mixed |
| Q3.4 - Do you find useful that the teacher receive information about the inspection the student has done through the anatomical structures | |
| (what structures visited, how long for each one, etc...) in order to know the learning necessities of the student? | |
| Q3.5 - Do you find useful that teachers give feedback to the student from the data analysis of the information obtained through the application? | |
| Q3.6 - How do you think this feedback should be given to the student? (2 max. answers ordered) | |
| 1) | Through e-mail |
| 2) | Through the application |
| 3) | Through moodle or a similar teaching application |
| 4) | Presentially |
| 5) | Through Skype or facetime |
| 6) | Individually |
| 7) | Collectively |
| Q3.7 - When do you think feedback should be done? (2 max. answers ordered) | |
| 1) | During the use of the application |
| 2) | Immediately after using the application |
| 3) | During the same day of using the application (24h) |
| 4) | During the week of using the application |
| 5) | While implementing the course (semester) |
| 6) | Other: |
Results of questions in Category (1) (Q1.1, Q1.2 and Q1.3)
| Q1.1 | Students | Teachers | Q1.2 | Students | Teachers | Q1.3 | Students | Teachers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | 1 (5.6%) | 4 | 1 (5.6%) | 1 (16.7%) | 4 | |||
| 5 | 9 (50%) | 3 (50%) | 5 | 4 (22.2%) | 5 | 6 (33.3%) | 3 (50%) | |
| 6 | 8 (44.4%) | 3 (50%) | 6 | 13 (72.2%) | 5 (83.3%) | 6 | 12 (66.7%) | 3 (50%) |
Results of questions in Category (2)
| Q2.1 | Students | Teachers | Q2.2 | Students | Teachers | Q2.3 | Students | Teachers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | 2 (11.1%) | 4 | 4 | 1 (5.6%) | ||||
| 5 | 1 (5.6%) | 5 | 6 (33.3%) | 1 (16.7%) | 5 | 3 (16.7%) | 1 (16.7%) | |
| 6 | 15 (83.3%) | 6 (100%) | 6 | 12 (66.7%) | 5 (83.3%) | 6 | 14 (77.8%) | 5 (83.3%) |
| Q2.4 | Students | Teachers | Q2.5 | Students | Teachers | |||
| 4 | 4 | |||||||
| 5 | 2 (11.1%) | 5 | 3 (16.7%) | |||||
| 6 | 16 (88.9%) | 6 (100%) | 6 | 15 (83.3%) | 6 (100%) |
Fig. 2Answers to questions: a Q3.1. b Q3.2. c Q3.3
Results of questions Q3.4 and Q3.5
| Q3.4 | Students | Teachers | Q3.5 | Students | Teachers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 16 (88.9%) | 6 (100%) | Yes | 16 (88.9%) | 6 (100%) |
| No | 2 (11.1%) | No | 2 (11.1%) |
Fig. 3Answers to questions: a Q3.6. b Q3.7
Fig. 4Time spent by the user in each structure. Green bars: total time spent in the structure. Yellow bars: time with respect to the number of substructures
Number of labels existing in each anatomical structure
| Structure | Tag names |
|---|---|
| Eye | 20 |
| Circulatory | 112 |
| Brain | 59 |
| Lungs | 63 |
| Digestive | 30 |
| Heart | 14 |
| Ear | 16 |