Bach Michael, Schäfer Kerstin
Section Visual Function / Electrophysiology Eye Center, Freiburg University Medical Center, Killianstr 5, 79106, Freiburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2016 Jan 29;11(1):e0147803. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147803. eCollection 2016.
Assessment of visual acuity is a well standardized procedure at least for expert opinions and clinical trials. It is often recommended not giving patients feedback on the correctness of their responses. As this viewpoint has not been quantitatively examined so far, we quantitatively assessed possible effects of feedback on visual acuity testing. In 40 normal participants we presented Landolt Cs in 8 orientations using the automated Freiburg Acuity Test (FrACT, <michaelbach.de/fract. Over a run comprising 24 trials, the acuity threshold was measured with an adaptive staircase procedure. In an ABCDDCBA scheme, trial-by-trial feedback was provided in 2 x 4 conditions: (A) no feedback, (B) acoustic signals indicating correctness, (C)visual indication of correct orientation, and (D) a combination of (B) and (C). After each run the participants judged comfort. Main outcome measures were absolute visual acuity (logMAR), its test-retest agreement (limits of agreement) and participants' comfort estimates on a 5-step symmetric Likert scale. Feedback influenced acuity outcome significantly (p = 0.02), but with a tiny effect size: 0.02 logMAR poorer acuity for (D) compared to (A), even weaker effects for (B) and (C). Test-retest agreement was high (limits of agreement: ± 1.0 lines) and did not depend on feedback (p>0.5). The comfort ranking clearly differed, by 2 steps on the Likert scale: the condition (A)-no feedback-was on average "slightly uncomfortable", the other three conditions were "slightly comfortable" (p<0.0001). Feedback affected neither reproducibility nor the acuity outcome to any relevant extent. The participants, however, reported markedly greater comfort with any kind of feedback. We conclude that systematic feedback (as implemented in FrACT) offers nothing but advantages for routine use.
至少对于专家意见和临床试验而言,视力评估是一项标准化程度很高的程序。人们通常建议不要向患者反馈其回答的正确性。由于这一观点迄今为止尚未得到定量研究,我们对反馈在视力测试中可能产生的影响进行了定量评估。我们让40名正常参与者使用自动 Freiburg 视力测试(FrACT,<michaelbach.de/fract>),以8种方向呈现兰多尔特C形视标。在包含24次试验的一轮测试中,采用自适应阶梯法测量视力阈值。按照ABCDDCBA方案,在2×4种条件下逐次试验提供反馈:(A)无反馈,(B)用声音信号指示正确与否,(C)以视觉方式指示正确方向,(D)(B)和(C)的组合。每次测试结束后,参与者对舒适度进行评价。主要观察指标为绝对视力(logMAR)、其重测一致性(一致性界限)以及参与者在5级对称李克特量表上对舒适度的估计。反馈对视力结果有显著影响(p = 0.02),但效应量极小:与(A)相比,(D)的视力差0.02 logMAR,(B)和(C)的影响更小。重测一致性很高(一致性界限:±1.0行),且不依赖于反馈(p>0.5)。舒适度排名明显不同,在李克特量表上相差2级:(A)无反馈条件平均“略感不适”,其他三种条件“略感舒适”(p<0.0001)。反馈在任何相关程度上均未影响重复性或视力结果。然而,参与者报告称,任何形式的反馈都会让他们感觉舒适度明显更高。我们得出结论,系统反馈(如 FrACT 中所采用的)在常规使用中只有好处。