TY - JOUR
T1 - A pilot study on using eye tracking to understand assessment of surgical outcomes from clinical photography
AU - Kim, Min Soon
AU - Burgess, Angela
AU - Waters, Andrew J.
AU - Reece, Gregory P.
AU - Beahm, Elisabeth K.
AU - Crosby, Melissa A.
AU - Basen-Engquist, Karen M.
AU - Markey, Mia K.
PY - 2011/10
Y1 - 2011/10
N2 - Appearance changes resulting from breast cancer treatment impact the quality of life of breast cancer survivors, but current approaches to evaluating breast characteristics are very limited. It is challenging, even for experienced plastic surgeons, to describe how different aspects of breast morphology impact overall assessment of esthetics. Moreover, it is difficult to describe what they are looking for in a manner that facilitates quantification. The goal of this study is to assess the potential of using eyetracking technology to understand how plastic surgeons assess breast morphology by recording their gaze path while they rate physical characteristics of the breasts, e.g., symmetry, based on clinical photographs. In this study, dwell time, transition frequency, dwell sequence conditional probabilities, and dwell sequence joint probabilities were analyzed across photographic poses and three observers. Dwell-time analysis showed that all three surgeons spent the majority of their time on the anterior-posterior (AP) views. Similarly, transition frequency analysis between regions showed that there were substantially more transitions between the breast regions in the AP view, relative to the number of transitions between other views. The results of both the conditional and joint probability analyses between the breast regions showed that the highest probabilities of transitions were observed between the breast regions in the AP view (APRB, APLB) followed by the oblique views and the lateral views to complete evaluation of breast surgical outcomes.
AB - Appearance changes resulting from breast cancer treatment impact the quality of life of breast cancer survivors, but current approaches to evaluating breast characteristics are very limited. It is challenging, even for experienced plastic surgeons, to describe how different aspects of breast morphology impact overall assessment of esthetics. Moreover, it is difficult to describe what they are looking for in a manner that facilitates quantification. The goal of this study is to assess the potential of using eyetracking technology to understand how plastic surgeons assess breast morphology by recording their gaze path while they rate physical characteristics of the breasts, e.g., symmetry, based on clinical photographs. In this study, dwell time, transition frequency, dwell sequence conditional probabilities, and dwell sequence joint probabilities were analyzed across photographic poses and three observers. Dwell-time analysis showed that all three surgeons spent the majority of their time on the anterior-posterior (AP) views. Similarly, transition frequency analysis between regions showed that there were substantially more transitions between the breast regions in the AP view, relative to the number of transitions between other views. The results of both the conditional and joint probability analyses between the breast regions showed that the highest probabilities of transitions were observed between the breast regions in the AP view (APRB, APLB) followed by the oblique views and the lateral views to complete evaluation of breast surgical outcomes.
KW - Biomedical image analysis
KW - Breast neoplasm
KW - Decision support
KW - Evaluation research
KW - Eye movements
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84855587226&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10278-010-9338-x
DO - 10.1007/s10278-010-9338-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 20852914
AN - SCOPUS:84855587226
SN - 0897-1889
VL - 24
SP - 778
EP - 786
JO - Journal of Digital Imaging
JF - Journal of Digital Imaging
IS - 5
ER -