Surgery Open Science (Jul 2021)

The study of visuospatial abilities in trainees: A scoping review and proposed model

  • Meagane Maurice-Ventouris, BSc,
  • Hellmuth R. Muller Moran, MD,
  • Mohammed Alharbi, MD,
  • Byunghoon Tony Ahn, MEd,
  • Jason M. Harley, MA, PhD,
  • Kevin J. Lachapelle, MDCM, FACS, FRCPSC

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 25 – 33

Abstract

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Background: Visuospatial abilities are an important component of technical skill acquisition. Targeted visuospatial ability training may have positive implications for training programs. The development of such interventions requires an adequate understanding of the visuospatial ability processes necessary for surgical and nonsurgical tasks. This scoping review aims to identify the components of visuospatial ability that have been reported in surgical and nonsurgical trainees and determine if there is consensus regarding the language and psychometric measures used, clarifying the elements that may be required to develop interventions that enhance visuospatial ability. Methods: A scoping review was designed to identify relevant records from EMBASE and Medline until January 13, 2020. Data were extracted on visuospatial ability terminology, dimensions, instruments, and interventions with results stratified by specialty (surgical, nonsurgical, or mixed). Conference abstracts, opinion pieces, and review studies were excluded. Results: Out of 882 total records, 26 were identified that met criteria for inclusion. Surgical specialities were represented in >90% of results. A total of 16 unique terms were used to describe visuospatial ability and were measured using 34 instruments, of which eight were used more than once. Eighteen different dimensions were identified. A single study explored the effects of a targeted visuospatial ability intervention. Conclusion: A wide range of visuospatial ability terms, instruments, and dimensions were identified, suggesting an incomplete understanding of the components most relevant to surgical and nonsurgical tasks. This confusion may be hindering the development of visuospatial ability targeted interventions during residency training. A rigorous methodological model is proposed to help unify the field and guide future research.