Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation

In this paper, we explore how a number of novel methods for visualizing and analyzing differences in eye-tracking data, including scanpath length, Levenshtein distance, and visual transition frequency, can help to elucidate the methods clinicians use for interpreting 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECG...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alan Richard Davies, Markel Vigo, Simon Harper, Caroline Jay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2018-02-01
Series:Journal of Eye Movement Research
Subjects:
ECG
EKG
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/3723
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spelling doaj-fa7047f6fc2e4c75a870361b42b483b02021-05-28T13:33:50ZengBern Open PublishingJournal of Eye Movement Research1995-86922018-02-0110510.16910/jemr.10.5.11Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretationAlan Richard Davies0Markel Vigo1Simon Harper2Caroline Jay3University of ManchesterUniversity of ManchesterUniversity of ManchesterUniversity of Manchester In this paper, we explore how a number of novel methods for visualizing and analyzing differences in eye-tracking data, including scanpath length, Levenshtein distance, and visual transition frequency, can help to elucidate the methods clinicians use for interpreting 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECGs). Visualizing the differences between multiple participants’ scanpaths simultaneously allowed us to answer questions including: do clinicians fixate randomly on the ECG, or do they apply a systematic approach?; is there a relationship between interpretation accuracy and visual behavior? Results indicate that practitioners have very different visual search strategies. Clinicians who incorrectly interpret the image have greater scanpath variability than those who correctly interpret it, indicating that differences between practitioners in terms of accuracy are reflected in different eye-movement behaviors.  The variation across practitioners is likely to be the result of differential training, clinical role and expertise. https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/3723Eye movementeye trackingvisualizationelectrocardiogramECGEKG
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alan Richard Davies
Markel Vigo
Simon Harper
Caroline Jay
spellingShingle Alan Richard Davies
Markel Vigo
Simon Harper
Caroline Jay
Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
Journal of Eye Movement Research
Eye movement
eye tracking
visualization
electrocardiogram
ECG
EKG
author_facet Alan Richard Davies
Markel Vigo
Simon Harper
Caroline Jay
author_sort Alan Richard Davies
title Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
title_short Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
title_full Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
title_fullStr Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
title_full_unstemmed Using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
title_sort using simultaneous scanpath visualization to investigate the influence of visual behaviour on medical image interpretation
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Journal of Eye Movement Research
issn 1995-8692
publishDate 2018-02-01
description In this paper, we explore how a number of novel methods for visualizing and analyzing differences in eye-tracking data, including scanpath length, Levenshtein distance, and visual transition frequency, can help to elucidate the methods clinicians use for interpreting 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECGs). Visualizing the differences between multiple participants’ scanpaths simultaneously allowed us to answer questions including: do clinicians fixate randomly on the ECG, or do they apply a systematic approach?; is there a relationship between interpretation accuracy and visual behavior? Results indicate that practitioners have very different visual search strategies. Clinicians who incorrectly interpret the image have greater scanpath variability than those who correctly interpret it, indicating that differences between practitioners in terms of accuracy are reflected in different eye-movement behaviors.  The variation across practitioners is likely to be the result of differential training, clinical role and expertise.
topic Eye movement
eye tracking
visualization
electrocardiogram
ECG
EKG
url https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/3723
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AT simonharper usingsimultaneousscanpathvisualizationtoinvestigatetheinfluenceofvisualbehaviouronmedicalimageinterpretation
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