Affiliations 

  • 1 School of Dentistry, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
  • 2 School of Psychology, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
  • 3 Urology, St James University Hospital, Leeds, UK
  • 4 Department of Psychology, Jeffrey Cheah School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Monash University, Selangor, Malaysia
  • 5 School of Psychology, Lincoln University, Lincoln, UK
BMJ Surg Interv Health Technol, 2020;2(1):e000040.
PMID: 35047792 DOI: 10.1136/bmjsit-2020-000040

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Investigations into surgical expertise have almost exclusively focused on overt behavioral characteristics with little consideration of the underlying neural processes. Recent advances in neuroimaging technologies, for example, wireless, wearable scalp-recorded electroencephalography (EEG), allow an insight into the neural processes governing performance. We used scalp-recorded EEG to examine whether surgical expertise and task performance could be differentiated according to an oscillatory brain activity signal known as frontal theta-a putative biomarker for cognitive control processes.

DESIGN SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Behavioral and EEG data were acquired from dental surgery trainees with 1 year (n=25) and 4 years of experience (n=20) while they performed low and high difficulty drilling tasks on a virtual reality surgical simulator. EEG power in the 4-7 Hz range in frontal electrodes (indexing frontal theta) was examined as a function of experience, task difficulty and error rate.

RESULTS: Frontal theta power was greater for novices relative to experts (p=0.001), but did not vary according to task difficulty (p=0.15) and there was no Experience × Difficulty interaction (p=0.87). Brain-behavior correlations revealed a significant negative relationship between frontal theta and error in the experienced group for the difficult task (r=-0.594, p=0.0058), but no such relationship emerged for novices.

CONCLUSION: We find frontal theta power differentiates between surgical experiences but correlates only with error rates for experienced surgeons while performing difficult tasks. These results provide a novel perspective on the relationship between expertise and surgical performance.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.