• skip to content
  • skip to navigation
  • skip to supporting content
Homepage
CLOK - Central Lancashire Online Knowledge
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Policies
  • Deposit Guide: Research eTheses
  • Copyright Guide
  • Contact
  • Links
    • Login
  • Deposit
  • Search Item
  • Search FullText
  • Browse

Viewing another person’s eye movements improves identification of pulmonary nodules in chest x-ray inspection

Tools
- Tools
+ Tools

Litchfield, Damien, Ball, Linden J., Donovan, Tim, Manning, David J. and Crawford, Trever (2010) Viewing another person’s eye movements improves identification of pulmonary nodules in chest x-ray inspection. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, , 16 (3). pp. 251-262. ISSN 1076-898X

[img] Microsoft Word - Accepted Version
Restricted to Registered users only

222Kb

Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0020082

Abstract

Double reading of chest x-rays is often used to ensure that fewer abnormalities are missed, but very little is known about how the search behavior of others affects observer performance. A series of experiments investigated whether radiographers benefit from knowing where another person looked for pulmonary nodules, and whether the expertise of the model providing the search behavior was a contributing factor. Experiment 1 compared the diagnostic performance of novice and experienced radiographers examining chest x-rays and found that both groups performed better when shown the search behavior of either a novice radiographer or an expert radiologist. Experiment 2 established that benefits in performance only arose when the eye movements shown were related to the search for nodules; however, only the novices' diagnostic performance consistently improved when shown the expert's search behavior. Experiment 3 reexamined the contribution of task, image, and the expertise of the model underlying this benefit. Consistent with Experiment 1, novice radiographers were better at identifying nodules when shown either a naïve's search behavior or an expert radiologist's search behavior, but they demonstrated no improvement when shown a naïve model not searching for nodules. Our results suggest that although the benefits of this form of attentional guidance may be short-lived, novices can scaffold their decisions based on the search behavior of others.


Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords (separate with ;):eyes; movement;
Subjects:B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BF Psychology
Schools:School of Psychology
ID Code:6118
Deposited By: Laura Hunt
Deposited On:12 Nov 2012 14:42
Last Modified:20 Mar 2013 15:41

Repository Staff Only: item control page

University of Central Lancashire

Preston,
Lancashire,
PR1 2HE

Tel: +44 (0)1772 201 201

Other Links

  • Contact UCLan
  • How to find us
  • Help

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • UCLan RSS
  • Contact UCLan
  • Copyright |
  • Disclaimer |
  • Data Protection Act |
  • Freedom of Information