Title of article :
A prospective study of the effect of video games on robotic surgery skills using the high-fidelity virtual reality RobotiX simulator
Author/Authors :
Hvolbek, Andreas Pierre Department of Urology - Odense University Hospital - Odense, Denmark , Lund, Lars Department of Urology - Odense University Hospital - Odense, Denmark , Nilsson, Philip Mørkeberg Copenhagen Academy for Medical Education and Simulation - Rigshospitalet - University of Copenhagen and the Capital Region of Denmark - Copenhagen, Denmark , Sanguedolce, Francesco Department of Urology - Aalborg University Hospital - Aalborg, Denmark
Pages :
8
From page :
627
To page :
634
Abstract :
Robot-assisted surgery is a growing field. Prior video game experience might give advantage to novice robotic surgeons. Aim Assessing if prior video gaming experience gives advantage in performing high-fidelity virtual reality (VR)-simulated robotic surgery. Methods In this observational study, 30 medical students and 2 interns (17 females; 15 males) with median age 25 years (range, 24–26 years) were recruited and subsequently divided into groups according to prior gaming experience; gamers (≥6 video game hours/week) vs nongamers (<6 video game hours/week). Participants performed VR-simulated urethrovesical anastomosis on RobotiX Mentor, which measured performance parameters. Participants answered a questionnaire for demographics and gaming experience. Groups were compared using Mann–Whitney U and multiple regression. Results Gamers significantly outperformed nongamers in 3 of 24 performance metrics (p<0.05), and there was a trend toward better results for 7 of the 21 remaining metrics. Males outperformed females in 5 of 24 metrics (p<0.05) but were overrepresented among gamers. Conclusion Prior video game experience >6 hrs/week might give advantage in simulated robotic surgery. We recommend future studies testing this hypothesis to develop simulator programs for certification of robotic surgeons.
Keywords :
video game , computer simulation , virtual reality , procedure specific , robot-assisted surgery
Journal title :
Advances in Medical Education and Practice
Serial Year :
2019
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2625452
Link To Document :
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