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Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study

BACKGROUND: Virtual patients are interactive computer simulations that are increasingly used as learning activities in modern health care education, especially in teaching clinical decision making. A key challenge is how to retrieve and repurpose virtual patients as unique types of educational resou...

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Autores principales: Dafli, Eleni, Antoniou, Panagiotis, Ioannidis, Lazaros, Dombros, Nicholas, Topps, David, Bamidis, Panagiotis D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications Inc. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4319094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25616272
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3933
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author Dafli, Eleni
Antoniou, Panagiotis
Ioannidis, Lazaros
Dombros, Nicholas
Topps, David
Bamidis, Panagiotis D
author_facet Dafli, Eleni
Antoniou, Panagiotis
Ioannidis, Lazaros
Dombros, Nicholas
Topps, David
Bamidis, Panagiotis D
author_sort Dafli, Eleni
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Virtual patients are interactive computer simulations that are increasingly used as learning activities in modern health care education, especially in teaching clinical decision making. A key challenge is how to retrieve and repurpose virtual patients as unique types of educational resources between different platforms because of the lack of standardized content-retrieving and repurposing mechanisms. Semantic Web technologies provide the capability, through structured information, for easy retrieval, reuse, repurposing, and exchange of virtual patients between different systems. OBJECTIVE: An attempt to address this challenge has been made through the mEducator Best Practice Network, which provisioned frameworks for the discovery, retrieval, sharing, and reuse of medical educational resources. We have extended the OpenLabyrinth virtual patient authoring and deployment platform to facilitate the repurposing and retrieval of existing virtual patient material. METHODS: A standalone Web distribution and Web interface, which contains an extension for the OpenLabyrinth virtual patient authoring system, was implemented. This extension was designed to semantically annotate virtual patients to facilitate intelligent searches, complex queries, and easy exchange between institutions. The OpenLabyrinth extension enables OpenLabyrinth authors to integrate and share virtual patient case metadata within the mEducator3.0 network. Evaluation included 3 successive steps: (1) expert reviews; (2) evaluation of the ability of health care professionals and medical students to create, share, and exchange virtual patients through specific scenarios in extended OpenLabyrinth (OLabX); and (3) evaluation of the repurposed learning objects that emerged from the procedure. RESULTS: We evaluated 30 repurposed virtual patient cases. The evaluation, with a total of 98 participants, demonstrated the system’s main strength: the core repurposing capacity. The extensive metadata schema presentation facilitated user exploration and filtering of resources. Usability weaknesses were primarily related to standard computer applications’ ease of use provisions. Most evaluators provided positive feedback regarding educational experiences on both content and system usability. Evaluation results replicated across several independent evaluation events. CONCLUSIONS: The OpenLabyrinth extension, as part of the semantic mEducator3.0 approach, is a virtual patient sharing approach that builds on a collection of Semantic Web services and federates existing sources of clinical and educational data. It is an effective sharing tool for virtual patients and has been merged into the next version of the app (OpenLabyrinth 3.3). Such tool extensions may enhance the medical education arsenal with capacities of creating simulation/game-based learning episodes, massive open online courses, curricular transformations, and a future robust infrastructure for enabling mobile learning.
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spelling pubmed-43190942015-02-13 Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study Dafli, Eleni Antoniou, Panagiotis Ioannidis, Lazaros Dombros, Nicholas Topps, David Bamidis, Panagiotis D J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Virtual patients are interactive computer simulations that are increasingly used as learning activities in modern health care education, especially in teaching clinical decision making. A key challenge is how to retrieve and repurpose virtual patients as unique types of educational resources between different platforms because of the lack of standardized content-retrieving and repurposing mechanisms. Semantic Web technologies provide the capability, through structured information, for easy retrieval, reuse, repurposing, and exchange of virtual patients between different systems. OBJECTIVE: An attempt to address this challenge has been made through the mEducator Best Practice Network, which provisioned frameworks for the discovery, retrieval, sharing, and reuse of medical educational resources. We have extended the OpenLabyrinth virtual patient authoring and deployment platform to facilitate the repurposing and retrieval of existing virtual patient material. METHODS: A standalone Web distribution and Web interface, which contains an extension for the OpenLabyrinth virtual patient authoring system, was implemented. This extension was designed to semantically annotate virtual patients to facilitate intelligent searches, complex queries, and easy exchange between institutions. The OpenLabyrinth extension enables OpenLabyrinth authors to integrate and share virtual patient case metadata within the mEducator3.0 network. Evaluation included 3 successive steps: (1) expert reviews; (2) evaluation of the ability of health care professionals and medical students to create, share, and exchange virtual patients through specific scenarios in extended OpenLabyrinth (OLabX); and (3) evaluation of the repurposed learning objects that emerged from the procedure. RESULTS: We evaluated 30 repurposed virtual patient cases. The evaluation, with a total of 98 participants, demonstrated the system’s main strength: the core repurposing capacity. The extensive metadata schema presentation facilitated user exploration and filtering of resources. Usability weaknesses were primarily related to standard computer applications’ ease of use provisions. Most evaluators provided positive feedback regarding educational experiences on both content and system usability. Evaluation results replicated across several independent evaluation events. CONCLUSIONS: The OpenLabyrinth extension, as part of the semantic mEducator3.0 approach, is a virtual patient sharing approach that builds on a collection of Semantic Web services and federates existing sources of clinical and educational data. It is an effective sharing tool for virtual patients and has been merged into the next version of the app (OpenLabyrinth 3.3). Such tool extensions may enhance the medical education arsenal with capacities of creating simulation/game-based learning episodes, massive open online courses, curricular transformations, and a future robust infrastructure for enabling mobile learning. JMIR Publications Inc. 2015-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4319094/ /pubmed/25616272 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3933 Text en ©Eleni Dafli, Panagiotis Antoniou, Lazaros Ioannidis, Nicholas Dombros, David Topps, Panagiotis D Bamidis. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 22.01.2015. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Dafli, Eleni
Antoniou, Panagiotis
Ioannidis, Lazaros
Dombros, Nicholas
Topps, David
Bamidis, Panagiotis D
Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study
title Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study
title_full Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study
title_fullStr Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study
title_full_unstemmed Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study
title_short Virtual Patients on the Semantic Web: A Proof-of-Application Study
title_sort virtual patients on the semantic web: a proof-of-application study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4319094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25616272
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3933
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