Abstract

Modern surgery crucially relies on teamwork between surgeons and assistants. The science of teamwork has been and is being studied extensively although the use of specific objective methodologies such as shared pupil dilations has not been studied as sufficiently as subjective methods. In this study, we investigated team members' shared pupil dilations as a surrogate for surgeon's team performance during a simulated laparoscopic procedure. Fourteen subjects formed dyad teams to perform a simulated laparoscopic object transportation task. Both team members' pupil dilation and eye gaze were tracked simultaneously during the procedure. Video analysis was used to identify key event movement landmarks for subtask segmentation to facilitate data analysis. Three levels of each teams' performance were determined according to task completion time and accuracy (object dropping times). The determined coefficient of determination (R2) was used to calculate the similarity in pupil dilations between 2 individual members' pupil diameters in each team. A mixed-design analysis of variance was conducted to explore how team performance level and task type were correlated to joint pupil dilation. The results showed that pupil dilations of higher performance teams were more synchronized, with significantly higher similarities (R2) in pupil dilation patterns between team members than those of lower performance teams (0.36 ± 0.22 vs. 0.21 ± 0.14, P < 0.001). Levels of pupil dilation synchronization presented among teams reflect differences in performance levels while executing simulated laparoscopic tasks; this demonstrated the potential of using joint pupil dilation as an objective indicator of surgical teamwork performance.

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