Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic

Background: COVID-19’s infection control policies have hindered the Deliberate Practice of clinical examinations. Guided Mental Rehearsal (GMR) may overcome this obstacle by facilitating independent, repetitive practice. Underpinned by the ‘Motor Simulation Theory,’ GMR reinforces similar neuro-cir...

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Main Authors: Ding, Jianbin, Yap, Andrew Shi-Jie, Thng, Zheng Xian, Gan, Nicola Yi'an, Tan, Johnson Choon-Hwai, Yip, Chee Chew
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170408
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1704082023-09-11T07:44:40Z Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic Ding, Jianbin Yap, Andrew Shi-Jie Thng, Zheng Xian Gan, Nicola Yi'an Tan, Johnson Choon-Hwai Yip, Chee Chew Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Khoo Teck Puat Hospital Tan Tock Seng Hospital Science::Medicine Mental Rehearsal COVID-19 Background: COVID-19’s infection control policies have hindered the Deliberate Practice of clinical examinations. Guided Mental Rehearsal (GMR) may overcome this obstacle by facilitating independent, repetitive practice. Underpinned by the ‘Motor Simulation Theory,’ GMR reinforces similar neuro-circuit activations during physical practice and was proven effective in surgical training. Methods: This prospective, randomized controlled study evaluated the efficacy of GMR versus ‘peer-learning’ of Confrontational Visual Field Examination (CVFE). Third-year medical-students without clinical Ophthalmology experience were recruited. Controls (n = 40) watched an e-learning instructional video (8-min CVFE tutorial) followed by 6-min of ‘peer-learning.’ GMR-students (n = 40) had ‘peer-learning’ replaced by a 6-min GMR audio-recording (CVFE running commentary). Pre-test and post-test MCQs were administered to determine baseline knowledge and knowledge acquisition, respectively. 28 controls and 26 GMR-students performed CVFE on simulated patients with right homonymous hemianopia. Four Ophthalmologists graded their performances using a checklist-based marking scheme. Results: Both groups did not exhibit a significant difference in pre-test scores (8.550 vs. 7.947, p = 0.266); outcome of sub-group analysis of CVFE-performing candidates was similar (8.214 vs. 7.833, p = 0.561). Post-test scores were significantly higher than pre-test in both groups (all p < .001), without inter-group difference (14.000 vs. 15.000, p = 0.715). GMR-group had significantly higher scores on CVFE performance than controls (85.354 vs. 73.679%, p = .001). Conclusions: GMR improved psychomotor but not cognitive aspect of learning CVFE. This may be attributable to GMR’s theoretical resemblance with physical practice, with additional expert guidance. By enabling independent learning, GMR may also reduce the demand for teaching manpower and thus education cost in the future. 2023-09-11T07:44:39Z 2023-09-11T07:44:39Z 2023 Journal Article Ding, J., Yap, A. S., Thng, Z. X., Gan, N. Y., Tan, J. C. & Yip, C. C. (2023). Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic. Medical Teacher, 45(6), 658-663. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0142159X.2022.2145941 0142-159X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170408 10.1080/0142159X.2022.2145941 36420808 2-s2.0-85142629033 6 45 658 663 en Medical Teacher © 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Medicine
Mental Rehearsal
COVID-19
spellingShingle Science::Medicine
Mental Rehearsal
COVID-19
Ding, Jianbin
Yap, Andrew Shi-Jie
Thng, Zheng Xian
Gan, Nicola Yi'an
Tan, Johnson Choon-Hwai
Yip, Chee Chew
Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
description Background: COVID-19’s infection control policies have hindered the Deliberate Practice of clinical examinations. Guided Mental Rehearsal (GMR) may overcome this obstacle by facilitating independent, repetitive practice. Underpinned by the ‘Motor Simulation Theory,’ GMR reinforces similar neuro-circuit activations during physical practice and was proven effective in surgical training. Methods: This prospective, randomized controlled study evaluated the efficacy of GMR versus ‘peer-learning’ of Confrontational Visual Field Examination (CVFE). Third-year medical-students without clinical Ophthalmology experience were recruited. Controls (n = 40) watched an e-learning instructional video (8-min CVFE tutorial) followed by 6-min of ‘peer-learning.’ GMR-students (n = 40) had ‘peer-learning’ replaced by a 6-min GMR audio-recording (CVFE running commentary). Pre-test and post-test MCQs were administered to determine baseline knowledge and knowledge acquisition, respectively. 28 controls and 26 GMR-students performed CVFE on simulated patients with right homonymous hemianopia. Four Ophthalmologists graded their performances using a checklist-based marking scheme. Results: Both groups did not exhibit a significant difference in pre-test scores (8.550 vs. 7.947, p = 0.266); outcome of sub-group analysis of CVFE-performing candidates was similar (8.214 vs. 7.833, p = 0.561). Post-test scores were significantly higher than pre-test in both groups (all p < .001), without inter-group difference (14.000 vs. 15.000, p = 0.715). GMR-group had significantly higher scores on CVFE performance than controls (85.354 vs. 73.679%, p = .001). Conclusions: GMR improved psychomotor but not cognitive aspect of learning CVFE. This may be attributable to GMR’s theoretical resemblance with physical practice, with additional expert guidance. By enabling independent learning, GMR may also reduce the demand for teaching manpower and thus education cost in the future.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Ding, Jianbin
Yap, Andrew Shi-Jie
Thng, Zheng Xian
Gan, Nicola Yi'an
Tan, Johnson Choon-Hwai
Yip, Chee Chew
format Article
author Ding, Jianbin
Yap, Andrew Shi-Jie
Thng, Zheng Xian
Gan, Nicola Yi'an
Tan, Johnson Choon-Hwai
Yip, Chee Chew
author_sort Ding, Jianbin
title Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
title_short Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
title_full Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
title_fullStr Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
title_full_unstemmed Investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent E-learning (IMAGINE) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
title_sort investigating mental rehearsal's applicability in guiding independent e-learning (imagine) of eye examination skills during the pandemic
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170408
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