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Reading the lesson: eliciting requirements for a mammography training application
Author(s) -
M. Hartswood,
Lilian Blot,
PM Taylor,
Stuart Anderson,
Rob Procter,
Louise Wilkinson,
Lesley Smart
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
proceedings of spie, the international society for optical engineering/proceedings of spie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.192
H-Index - 176
eISSN - 1996-756X
pISSN - 0277-786X
DOI - 10.1117/12.813920
Subject(s) - computer science , presentation (obstetrics) , mammography , session (web analytics) , set (abstract data type) , software , hierarchy , multimedia , reading (process) , protocol (science) , training (meteorology) , scheme (mathematics) , human–computer interaction , artificial intelligence , medicine , radiology , world wide web , physics , alternative medicine , pathology , cancer , breast cancer , economics , law , market economy , political science , meteorology , programming language , mathematical analysis , mathematics
Demonstrations of a prototype training tool were used to elicit requirements for an intelligent training system for screening mammography. The prototype allowed senior radiologists (mentors) to select cases from a distributed database of images to meet the specific training requirements of junior colleagues (trainees) and then provided automated feedback in response to trainees' attempts at interpretation. The tool was demonstrated to radiologists and radiographers working in the breast screening service at four evaluation sessions. Participants highlighted ease of selecting cases that can deliver specific learning objectives as important for delivering effective training. To usefully structure a large data set of training images we undertook a classification exercise of mentor authored free text 'learning points' attached to training case obtained from two screening centres (n=333, n=129 respectively). We were able to adduce a hierarchy of abstract categories representing classes of lesson that groups of cases were intended to convey (e.g. Temporal change, Misleading juxtapositions, Position of lesion, Typical/Atypical presentation, and so on). In this paper we present the method used to devise this classification, the classification scheme itself, initial user-feedback, and our plans to incorporated it into a software tool to aid case selection.

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