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Getting nowhere fast: trade-off between speed and precision in training to execute image-guided hand-tool movements

机译:快速到达终点:在训练中执行图像引导的手动工具移动的速度和精度之间的权衡

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Background The speed and precision with which objects are moved by hand or hand-tool interaction under image guidance depend on a specific type of visual and spatial sensorimotor learning. Novices have to learn to optimally control what their hands are doing in a real-world environment while looking at an image representation of the scene on a video monitor. Previous research has shown slower task execution times and lower performance scores under image-guidance compared with situations of direct action viewing. The cognitive processes for overcoming this drawback by training are not yet understood. Methods We investigated the effects of training on the time and precision of direct view versus image guided object positioning on targets of a Real-world Action Field (RAF). Two men and two women had to learn to perform the task as swiftly and as precisely as possible with their dominant hand, using a tool or not and wearing a glove or not. Individuals were trained in sessions of mixed trial blocks with no feed-back. Results As predicted, image-guidance produced significantly slower times and lesser precision in all trainees and sessions compared with direct viewing. With training, all trainees get faster in all conditions, but only one of them gets reliably more precise in the image-guided conditions. Speed-accuracy trade-offs in the individual performance data show that the highest precision scores and steepest learning curve, for time and precision, were produced by the slowest starter. Fast starters produced consistently poorer precision scores in all sessions. The fastest starter showed no sign of stable precision learning, even after extended training. Conclusions Performance evolution towards optimal precision is compromised when novices start by going as fast as they can. The findings have direct implications for individual skill monitoring in training programmes for image-guided technology applications with human operators.
机译:背景技术在图像引导下通过手或手动工具交互移动对象的速度和精度取决于视觉和空间感觉运动学习的特定类型。新手必须学会在视频监视器上查看场景的图像表示时,以最佳方式控制他们在现实世界环境中的手在做什么。先前的研究表明,与直接观看动作相比,在图像引导下,任务执行时间更慢,性能得分更低。通过训练克服这一缺点的认知过程尚不清楚。方法我们调查了训练对直接观看的时间和精度的影响,以及在实际行动场(RAF)的目标上进行图像引导的对象定位的影响。两个男人和两个女人必须学会用惯用的手尽可能快而准确地执行任务,是否使用工具,是否戴着手套。在没有反馈的情况下对个人进行了混合试验区的培训。结果正如预期的那样,与直接观看相比,在所有受训者和课程中,图像指导的时间明显缩短,精度降低。通过培训,所有学员在任何情况下都可以更快地获得训练,但是只有其中一名学员可以在图像指导的情况下可靠地变得更加精确。单个性能数据中的速度精度折衷表明,最慢的启动器在时间和精度上都具有最高的精度得分和最陡的学习曲线。快速启动器在所有会话中始终产生较差的精度得分。即使经过长时间的培训,最快的启动器也没有显示稳定的精确学习的迹象。结论当新手以最快的速度开始时,朝着最佳精度的性能发展就受到了损害。这些发现对于在与人类操作员进行图像引导技术应用的培训计划中的个人技能监控具有直接的意义。

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