Training Together: How Another Human Trainee’s Presence Affects Behavior during Virtual Human-Based Team Training

Q1 Computer Science Frontiers in ICT Pub Date : 2016-08-01 DOI:10.3389/fict.2016.00017
Andrew C. Robb, A. Kleinsmith, Andrew Cordar, C. White, A. Wendling, S. Lampotang, Benjamin C. Lok
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Despite research showing that team training can lead to strong improvements in team performance, logistical difficulties can prevent team training programs from being adopted on a large scale. A proposed solution to these difficulties is the use of virtual humans to replace missing teammates. Existing research evaluating the use of virtual humans for team training has been conducted in settings involving a single human trainee. However, in the real world multiple human trainees would most likely train together. In this paper, we explore how the presence of a second human trainee can alter behavior during a medical team training program. Ninety-two nurses and surgical technicians participated in a medical training exercise, where they worked with a virtual surgeon and virtual anesthesiologist to prepare a simulated patient for surgery. The agency of the nurse and the surgical technician were varied between three conditions: human nurses and surgical technicians working together; human nurses working with a virtual surgical technician; and human surgical technicians working with a virtual nurse. Variations in agency did not produce statistically significant differences in the training outcomes, but several notable differences were observed in other aspects of the team's behavior. Specifically, when working with a virtual nurse, human surgical technicians were more likely to assist with speaking up about patient safety issues that were outside of their normal responsibilities; human trainees spent less time searching for a missing item when working with a virtual partner, likely because the virtual partner was physically unable to move throughout the room and assist with the searching process; and more breaks in presence were observed when two human teammates were present. These results show that some behaviors may be influenced by the presence of multiple human trainees, though these behaviors may not impinge on core training goals. When developing virtual human-based training programs, designers should consider that the presence of other humans may reduce involvement during training moments perceived to be the responsibility of other trainees, and should consider that a virtual teammate's limitations may cause human teammates to limit their own behaviors in corresponding ways (e.g. searching less).
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一起训练:在虚拟的基于人的团队训练中,另一个人类学员的存在如何影响行为
尽管研究表明,团队培训可以大大提高团队绩效,但后勤方面的困难可能会阻碍团队培训计划的大规模采用。针对这些困难的一个建议解决方案是使用虚拟人来代替失踪的队友。现有的研究评估了虚拟人在团队训练中的使用,这些研究是在涉及单个人类受训者的环境中进行的。然而,在现实世界中,多个人类受训者很可能会一起训练。在本文中,我们探讨了在医疗团队训练计划中,第二名人类受训者的存在如何改变行为。92名护士和外科技术人员参加了一项医疗培训演习,在那里他们与虚拟外科医生和虚拟麻醉师一起为模拟患者做手术准备。护士和外科技术人员的代理在三种情况下有所不同:人类护士和外科技术人员一起工作;人类护士与虚拟外科技术人员一起工作;人类外科技术人员和虚拟护士一起工作。代理的变化在训练结果上没有统计学上的显著差异,但在团队行为的其他方面观察到一些显著的差异。具体来说,当与虚拟护士合作时,人类外科技术人员更有可能协助谈论患者安全问题,这些问题超出了他们的正常职责;当与虚拟伙伴一起工作时,人类受训者花在寻找丢失物品上的时间更少,这可能是因为虚拟伙伴在身体上无法在房间里移动并协助搜索过程;当两名人类队友在场时,观察到更多的断裂。这些结果表明,一些行为可能会受到多个人类受训者的影响,尽管这些行为可能不会影响核心训练目标。在开发基于人类的虚拟训练项目时,设计师应该考虑到其他人的存在可能会减少训练期间其他受训者的参与度,并且应该考虑到虚拟队友的局限性可能会导致人类队友以相应的方式限制自己的行为(例如减少搜索)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Frontiers in ICT
Frontiers in ICT Computer Science-Computer Networks and Communications
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