Video game experience affects performance, cognitive load, and brain activity in laparoscopic surgery training

IF 0.5 Q4 SURGERY Turkish Journal of Surgery Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.47717/turkjsurg.2023.5674
Hasan Onur Keleş, Ahmet Omurtag
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Abstract

Objective: Video games can be a valuable tool for surgery training. Individuals who interact or play video games tend to have a better visuospatial ability when compared to non-gamers. Numerous studies suggest that video game experience is associated with faster acquisition, greater sharpening, and longer retention of laparoscopic skills. Given the neurocognitive complexity of surgery skill, multimodal approaches are required to understand how video game playing enhances laparoscopy skill. Material and Methods: Twenty-seven students with no laparoscopy experience and varying levels of video game experience performed standard laparoscopic training tasks. Their performance, subjective cognitive loading, and prefrontal cortical activity were recorded and analyzed. As a reference point to use in comparing the two novice groups, we also included data from 13 surgeons with varying levels of laparoscopy experience and no video game experience. Results: Results indicated that video game experience was correlated with higher performance (R 2 = 0.22, p< 0.01) and lower cognitive load (R 2 = 0.21, p< 0.001), and the prefrontal cortical activation of students with gaming experience was relatively lower than those without gaming experience. In terms of these variables, gaming experience in novices tended to produce effects similar to those of laparoscopy experience in surgeons. Conclusion: Our results suggest that along the dimensions of performance, cognitive load, and brain activity, the effects of video gaming experience on novice laparoscopy trainees are similar to those of real-world laparoscopy experience on surgeons. We believe that the neural underpinnings of surgery skill and its links with gaming experience need to be investigated further using wearable functional brain imaging.
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视频游戏体验影响腹腔镜手术训练中的表现、认知负荷和大脑活动
目的:电子游戏可以成为外科训练的宝贵工具。与不玩电子游戏的人相比,互动或玩电子游戏的人往往具有更好的视觉空间能力。许多研究表明,电子游戏体验与更快的获取、更强的锐化和更长的腹腔镜技能保留有关。鉴于手术技能的神经认知复杂性,需要多模式方法来理解视频游戏如何提高腹腔镜技能。材料和方法:27名没有腹腔镜经验和不同程度的视频游戏经验的学生执行标准的腹腔镜训练任务。记录和分析他们的表现、主观认知负荷和前额皮质活动。作为比较两组新手的参考点,我们还纳入了13名外科医生的数据,他们有不同程度的腹腔镜手术经验,没有电子游戏经验。结果表明,电子游戏体验与更高的表现相关(r2 = 0.22, p<0.01)和较低的认知负荷(r2 = 0.21, p<0.001),有游戏经历的学生的前额叶皮层激活相对低于没有游戏经历的学生。就这些变量而言,新手的游戏体验倾向于产生与外科医生的腹腔镜体验相似的效果。结论:我们的研究结果表明,在表现、认知负荷和大脑活动的维度上,视频游戏体验对腹腔镜新手的影响与现实世界腹腔镜体验对外科医生的影响相似。我们认为,手术技能的神经基础及其与游戏体验的联系需要通过可穿戴功能脑成像进行进一步研究。
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CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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