Motion Smoothness Metrics for Cannulation Skill Assessment: What Factors Matter?

Singh, Simar and Bible, Joe and Liu, Zhanhe and Zhang, Ziyang and Singapogu, Ravikiran (2021) Motion Smoothness Metrics for Cannulation Skill Assessment: What Factors Matter? Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 8. ISSN 2296-9144

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Abstract

Medical training simulators have the potential to provide remote and automated assessment of skill vital for medical training. Consequently, there is a need to develop “smart” training devices with robust metrics that can quantify clinical skills for effective training and self-assessment. Recently, metrics that quantify motion smoothness such as log dimensionless jerk (LDLJ) and spectral arc length (SPARC) are increasingly being applied in medical simulators. However, two key questions remain about the efficacy of such metrics: how do these metrics relate to clinical skill, and how to best compute these metrics from sensor data and relate them with similar metrics? This study addresses these questions in the context of hemodialysis cannulation by enrolling 52 clinicians who performed cannulation in a simulated arteriovenous (AV) fistula. For clinical skill, results demonstrate that the objective outcome metric flash ratio (FR), developed to measure the quality of task completion, outperformed traditional skill indicator metrics (years of experience and global rating sheet scores). For computing motion smoothness metrics for skill assessment, we observed that the lowest amount of smoothing could result in unreliable metrics. Furthermore, the relative efficacy of motion smoothness metrics when compared with other process metrics in correlating with skill was similar for FR, the most accurate measure of skill. These results provide guidance for the computation and use of motion-based metrics for clinical skill assessment, including utilizing objective outcome metrics as ideal measures for quantifying skill.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Research Librarians > Mathematical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@open.researchlibrarians.com
Date Deposited: 29 Jun 2023 04:08
Last Modified: 25 Oct 2023 05:18
URI: http://stm.e4journal.com/id/eprint/1352

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