| Literature DB >> 32333159 |
Pim Oomens1,2, Victor X Fu3,4, Vincent E E Kleinrensink4, Gert-Jan Kleinrensink4, Johannes Jeekel3,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Music can have a positive effect on stress and general task performance. This randomized crossover study assessed the effects of preferred music on laparoscopic surgical performance in a simulated setting.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32333159 PMCID: PMC7326888 DOI: 10.1007/s00268-020-05523-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg ISSN: 0364-2313 Impact factor: 3.352
Fig. 1Experiment timeline. The figure provides a timeline of the experiment for each sequence. M = music: participant-selected music via noise-cancelling headphones; C = control: noise-cancelling headphones without music; SURG-TLX: Surgical Task Load Index questionnaire
Demographic characteristics
| Full cohort ( | |
|---|---|
| Age: years (IQR) | 19 (18–21) |
| Sex: male | 19 (31.7) |
| Dexterity: right-handed (%) | 57 (95) |
| Year of study (IQR) | 1 (1–3) |
| Current or previous video game experience | 25 (41.7) |
| Importance of music on a 0–10 scale (IQR) | 8 (7–9) |
| Plays or has played a musical instrument (%) | 42 (70) |
| Top three favorite genres | Pop: 23.90% Classical: 17.90% Rock: 14.10% |
| Listens to music while studying (%) | 48 (80) |
| Top three favorite genres when studying | Classical: 30.10% Pop: 18.30% Instrumental: 17.20% |
Laparoscopic surgical performance data
| Full cohort ( | Music | Control | Median of differences | IQR of differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Path length (mm) | 1141.47 ± 357.42 | 1216.18 ± 419.81 | − 52.24 | (− 196.97–89.81) | 0.019a |
| Time to task completion (s) | 19.16 (16.10–22.68) | 19.72 (16.77–24.43) | − 0.81 | (− 3.44–0.66) | 0.037b |
| Normalized jerk (mm/s3) | 9595.16 (5885.91–13,934.26) | 9538.07 (6394.45–15,631.07) | − 982.12 | (− 4635.70–2673.27) | 0.171 |
Continuous variables presented as median (interquartile range) or mean ± standard deviation if the data were normally distributed
Median of differences: median of within-subject differences
IQR of differences: interquartile range of within-subject differences
aPaired samples t test
bWilcoxon signed-rank
Mental workload
| Full cohort ( | Within subject | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Music | Control | Differences | ||
| SURG-TLX | 26.00 (14.75–38.00) | 28.33 (18.75–42.67) | 0.021 | − 2.41 (− 7.17–1.83) |
| Mental demands | 20.00 (12.50–35.00) | 22.50 (13.75–35.00) | 0.160 | 0.00 (− 6.25–0.00) |
| Physical demands | 15.00 (7.50–18.75) | 17.50 (12.50–25.00) | 0.003 | − 2.50 (− 7.50–0.00) |
| Temporal demands | 22.50 (15.00–52.50) | 37.50 (17.50–51.25) | 0.156 | − 2.50 (− 12.50–7.50) |
| Situational Stress | 12.50 (7.50–31.25) | 22.50 (10.00–37.50) | 0.005 | − 2.50 (− 11.25–2.50) |
| Complexity | 22.50 (12.50–35.00) | 27.50 (17.50–35.00) | 0.008 | − 2.50 (− 7.50–2.50) |
| Distraction | 12.50 (8.75–25.00) | 15.00 (10.00–25.00) | 0.513 | 0.00 (− 7.50–0.00) |
Surgical Task Load Index (SURG-TLX) is a weighted score comprised of six subscales ranging from 0 to 100 representing general mental workload. Continuous variables presented in medians and (interquartile range)
P: Wilcoxon signed-rank test