# Medical trainees' emotions and their effects on perceptions of performance and team mood in team‐based simulations

**Authors:** Keerat Grewal, Sayed Azher, Matthew Moreno, Reinhard Pekrun, Jeffrey Wiseman, Jessica Flake, Susanne Lajoie, Ning‐Zi Sun, Gerald M. Fried, Elene Khalil, Jason M. Harley

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/bjep.70017 · The British Journal of Educational Psychology · 2025-08-13

## TL;DR

This study explores how emotions experienced by medical trainees during team-based simulations affect their perceptions of performance and team mood.

## Contribution

The study introduces and validates a new self-report tool (SERQ) to assess emotions in medical trainees during simulations.

## Key findings

- Team leaders reported higher levels of shame post-simulation compared to team members.
- Post-simulation happiness and hopefulness predicted perceptions of team performance and mood.
- Frustration after simulations predicted perceptions of team mood.

## Abstract

Emotions affect performance in learning contexts; however, their effects on medical trainees' performance in highly ecologically valid settings, like team‐based simulation training, are not well understood. It is therefore imperative to know which emotions are experienced by medical trainees and the impacts of these emotions on perceptions of performance and team mood.

To extend the understanding of medical trainees' emotions in the context of team‐based medical simulations using a new self‐report tool (Situated Emotion Regulation Questionnaire; SERQ).

Participants were 106 medical trainees participating in team‐based simulations. Seventy‐one participated in multiple simulations.

A field‐based, mixed‐methods methodology was used. Medical trainees self‐reported their emotions and perceptions of individual performance, team performance and team mood. Multi‐level analyses were used to account for nestedness. Debriefings were qualitatively analysed to provide validity evidence for the SERQ.

Team leaders reported significantly higher levels of shame post‐simulation than team members. A variable comprising post‐simulation happiness and hopefulness was a significant predictor of perceptions of team performance and team mood. Post‐simulation frustration was a significant predictor of perceptions of team mood. Participants' SERQ responses demonstrated alignment or mixed alignment with their debriefing responses.

Using multi‐level analyses, our research provides insight into medical trainees' emotions and their effects on perceptions in highly ecologically valid simulation trainings. Future medical education training may use these findings to develop curricula and simulations to induce specific emotions or practice emotion regulation. Additionally, the SERQ demonstrated promising validity evidence and may be a valuable future research and educational tool.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12879525/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12879525