Influence of Expertise on Perception and Understanding on Viewing a Molecular Animation of the Lung Endothelial Surface Layer and its Role in Inflammation

Chinami Michaels, Kevin Brennan, Leah A. Lebowicz, R. Dull, Christine D. Young
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Abstract

A study of the effect of expertise on the perception and understanding of a 3D biomedical animation and the ability of a 3D animation of the lung endothelial surface layer to generate understanding of, and interest in, the lung endothelial surface layer was carried out using a mix of quantitative and qualitative approaches. The animation was tested using eye-tracking with five lung trauma researchers who were experts on the animation's topic, the lung endothelial surface layer, and with 15 biomedical visualization graduate students who lacked prior knowledge of the structure and science of the lung endothelial surface layer. Information on demographics, knowledge gain on the lung endothelial surface layer, eye-tracking recordings, cued-retrospective reports, and written open-ended feedback were collected from both groups. The eye-tracking results, cued-retrospective audio recordings, and surveys between the groups of experts and novices showed expertise influenced perception and understanding of the animation of the lung ESL. The group with high expertise on the lung endothelial surface layer rated the animation as very engaging. They gained knowledge on the lung endothelial surface layer from the animation and would recommend the animation to their colleagues as an introduction to their research. Their eye-tracking results and cued-retrospective reporting showed greater attention paid to areas of high scientific relevancy in the animation. They also showed a viewing pattern of switching to one modality (audio or visual) to seek new information when shown familiar representations similar to schematics in the science literature. The group without prior knowledge of the lung endothelial surface layer focus also gained in knowledge of the lung endothelial surface layer after watching the animation. They paid more attention to aspects of how the animation was created and less to the scientifically relevant areas. They rated the animation on average as moderately engaging. These results demonstrate how important designing for a target audience is in order to maximize multimedia's potential to fully engage and generate interest, as prior expertise greatly influences how an audience perceives and understands biomedical animations.
专业知识对感知和理解观察肺内皮表面层分子动画及其在炎症中的作用的影响
研究了专业知识对三维生物医学动画的感知和理解的影响,以及肺内皮表面层三维动画对肺内皮表面层的理解和兴趣的能力,采用定量和定性的混合方法进行。该动画由五名肺外伤研究人员进行眼动追踪测试,他们是动画主题肺内皮表面层的专家,以及15名缺乏肺内皮表面层结构和科学知识的生物医学可视化研究生。收集两组患者的人口统计信息、肺内皮表面层知识获取情况、眼球追踪记录、线索回顾性报告和书面开放式反馈。眼动追踪结果、线索-回顾性录音以及专家组和新手组之间的调查显示,专业知识影响对肺部ESL动画的感知和理解。在肺内皮表面层方面具有高度专业知识的小组认为动画非常吸引人。他们从动画中获得了关于肺内皮表面层的知识,并将动画推荐给他们的同事作为他们研究的介绍。他们的眼球追踪结果和线索回顾报告显示,他们更关注动画中与科学高度相关的领域。当看到与科学文献中的原理图相似的熟悉表示时,他们也表现出切换到一种模式(音频或视觉)来寻找新信息的观看模式。先前不知道肺内皮表面层病灶的组在观看动画后也获得了肺内皮表面层的知识。他们更多地关注动画是如何制作的,而不是科学相关的领域。他们对动画的平均评价是中等吸引力。这些结果表明,为了最大限度地发挥多媒体充分参与和产生兴趣的潜力,为目标受众设计是多么重要,因为先前的专业知识极大地影响了受众如何感知和理解生物医学动画。
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