Title of article
Effect of fatigue on psychomotor and cognitive skills
Author/Authors
Kanav Kahol، نويسنده , , Mario J. Leyba، نويسنده , , Mary Deka، نويسنده , , Vikram Deka، نويسنده , , Stephanie Mayes، نويسنده , , Marshall Smith، نويسنده , , John J. Ferrara، نويسنده , , Forouzan Golshani and Sethuraman Panchanathan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
10
From page
195
To page
204
Abstract
Background
Previous studies have explored the effect of fatigue on general psychomotor proficiency. However, studies specifically addressing the effect of fatigue on surgical residents’ cognitive skills during simulated surgical exercises are lacking.
Methods
Thirty-seven surgical residents in both the precall and the postcall condition were tested for psychomotor and cognitive skill evaluation on a virtual-reality simulator with haptic feedback and hand-motion recording. To evaluate surgical skills, hand- and tool-movement smoothness, cognitive errors, and time to completion for specific tasks were analyzed.
Results
In addition increased cognitive errors, a significant decrease (P < .01) was recorded in the proficiency variables of memory, attention, and intermodal coordination tasks when residents were in the postcall condition.
Conclusions
Fatigue and sleep deprivation cause a significant deterioration in the surgical residents’ cognitive skills as measured by virtual reality simulation. Psychomotor skills are also negatively impacted during tasks that require a combination of psychomotor and cognitive skills.
Keywords
Haptic , Surgical residents , Sleep deprivation , Virtual Reality , cognitive performance
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Record number
618962
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