Journal of Investigative Surgery (Jun 2022)

Eye-Tracking Indicators of Workload in Surgery: A Systematic Review

  • Otto Tolvanen,
  • Antti-Pekka Elomaa,
  • Matti Itkonen,
  • Hana Vrzakova,
  • Roman Bednarik,
  • Antti Huotarinen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/08941939.2021.2025282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 6
pp. 1340 – 1349

Abstract

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Background Eye tracking is a powerful tool for unobtrusive and real time assessment of workload in clinical settings. Before the complex eye tracking derived surrogates can be proactively utilized to improve surgical safety, the indications, validity and reliability requires careful evaluation. Methods We conducted a systematic review of literature from 2010 to 2020 according to PRISMA guidelines. A search on PubMed, Cochrane, Scopus, Web of science, PsycInfo and Google scholar databases was conducted on July 2020. The following search query was used” ("eye tracking" OR "gaze tracking") AND (surgery OR surgical OR operative OR intraoperative) AND (workload OR stress)”. Short papers, no peer reviewed or papers in which eye-tracking methodology was not used to investigate workload or stress factors in surgery, were omitted. Results A total of 17 (N = 17) studies were identified eligible to this review. Most of the studies (n = 15) measured workload in simulated setting. Task difficulty and expertise were the most studied factors. Studies consistently showed surgeon’s eye movements such as pupil responses, gaze patterns, blinks were associated with the level of perceived workload. However, differences between measurements in operational room and simulated environments have been found. Conclusion Pupil responses, blink rate and gaze indices are valid indicators of workload. However, the effect of distractions and non-technical factors on workload is underrepresented aspect in the literature even though recognized as underlying factors in successful surgery.

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