Effect of Performance Feedback Timing on Motor Learning for a Surgical Training Task
Mary Kate Gale, Kailana Baker-Matsuoka, Ilana Nisky, Allison Okamura

TL;DR
This study shows that real-time multi-sensory error feedback significantly enhances motor learning and accuracy in virtual surgical training compared to delayed or no feedback, potentially improving surgical education.
Contribution
It demonstrates that real-time, multi-sensory feedback during virtual surgical training improves learning speed and accuracy over traditional post-task feedback methods.
Findings
Real-time feedback improved ring orientation accuracy.
Replay feedback outperformed no feedback in straight path sections.
No significant difference in overall ring position accuracy.
Abstract
Objective: Robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery (RMIS) has become the gold standard for a variety of surgical procedures, but the optimal method of training surgeons for RMIS is unknown. We hypothesized that real-time, rather than post-task, error feedback would better increase learning speed and reduce errors. Methods: Forty-two surgical novices learned a virtual version of the ring-on-wire task, a canonical task in RMIS training. We investigated the impact of feedback timing with multi-sensory (haptic and visual) cues in three groups: (1) real-time error feedback, (2) trial replay with error feedback, and (3) no error feedback. Results: Participant performance was evaluated based on the accuracy of ring position and orientation during the task. Participants who received real-time feedback outperformed other groups in ring orientation. Additionally, participants who received…
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