DocumentCode
652098
Title
The Effects of Interaction and Visual Fidelity on Learning Outcomes for a Virtual Pediatric Patient System
Author
Pence, Toni Bloodworth ; Dukes, Lauren Cairco ; Hodges, Larry F. ; Meehan, Nancy K. ; Johnson, A.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput., Clemson Univ., Clemson, SC, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
9-11 Sept. 2013
Firstpage
209
Lastpage
218
Abstract
One of the most common clinical education methods for teaching patient interaction skills to nursing students is role-playing established scenarios with their classmates. Unfortunately, this is far from simulating real world experiences that they will soon face, and does not provide the immediate, impartial feedback necessary for interviewing skills development. We developed a system for Scaffolded Interviews Developed by Nurses In Education (SIDNIE) that supports baccalaureate nursing education by providing multiple guided interview practice sessions with virtual characters. During the development and evaluation of SIDNIE we realized the importance of determining the visual and interaction fidelity requirements necessary for proper learning. In this paper we report on two fidelity studies conducted with nursing students. The goal of the visual fidelity study was to determine if our virtual characters containing life-like animations would have an effect on learning or if we would get the same effect using a stationary image of our virtual environment. The second study focused on the interaction fidelity of our system and the goal was to determine if the interaction modality had an effect on the learning outcome. In particular we evaluated the effect of voice input as compared to a standard mouse-click input for question selection.
Keywords
biomedical education; computer animation; computer based training; medical information systems; teaching; virtual reality; SIDNIE; clinical education methods; established scenario role-playing; interaction fidelity requirements; learning outcomes; life-like animations; mouse-click input; multiple guided interview practice sessions; nursing students; patient interaction skill teaching; question selection; scaffolded interviews developed by nurses in education; virtual environment; virtual pediatric patient system; visual fidelity requirements; Animation; Education; Interviews; Pediatrics; Virtual environments; Visualization; Human Computer Interaction; Simulation Training; Virtual Patients;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Healthcare Informatics (ICHI), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICHI.2013.36
Filename
6680480
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