Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry, University of Southern California, 925 West 34 St., Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA.
J Dent Educ. 2012 Oct;76(10):1365-70.
This article examines an autonomous virtual patient (AVP) system for identifying differences between novices and experts in dentistry. The two groups in the study were ten boarded or board-eligible experts (seven males, three females; mean±sd age 40±11) and twenty-six fourth-year dental students (fifteen males, eleven females; mean±sd age 27±3), who were defined as novices. All participants interviewed and mock-examined four randomly selected AVPs who had either orofacial pain or an oral medicine problem; they then selected needed diagnostic tests, diagnoses, treatments, and medications. The mean misrecognition rate of the software was between 13 and 19 percent. Data collected were examined for a difference between the two groups (novices versus experts) on multiple variables. Significant group differences existed in the final total score, the number of diagnostic tests ordered, and the number of medications selected. Novices reported that they found virtual patients to be a valuable educational experience. These data demonstrated that experts and novices asked essentially the same questions and spent similar amounts of time with the patients, yet the experts consistently scored higher and ordered fewer diagnostic tests and medications than the novices.
这篇文章探讨了一种自主虚拟患者(AVP)系统,用于识别牙科领域新手和专家之间的差异。研究中的两组分别是十名已获得或即将获得委员会认证的专家(七名男性,三名女性;平均年龄 40±11 岁)和二十六名四年级牙科学生(十五名男性,十一名女性;平均年龄 27±3 岁),他们被定义为新手。所有参与者都对随机选择的四个患有口颌疼痛或口腔医学问题的 AVP 进行了访谈和模拟检查;然后他们选择了所需的诊断测试、诊断、治疗和药物。软件的平均错误识别率在 13%到 19%之间。对多项变量进行了两组(新手与专家)之间的差异检验。在最终总分、所开诊断测试数量和所选择药物数量方面存在显著的组间差异。新手报告说,他们发现虚拟患者是一种有价值的教育体验。这些数据表明,专家和新手提出的问题本质上是相同的,并且与患者花费的时间相似,但专家的得分始终更高,开出的诊断测试和药物数量也比新手少。