Interactional Order and Constructed Ways of Seeing with Touchless Imaging Systems in Surgery

While surgical practices are increasingly reliant on a range of digital imaging technologies, the ability for clinicians to interact and manipulate these digital representations in the operating theatre using traditional touch based interaction devices is constrained by the need to maintain sterilit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computer supported cooperative work 2014-06, Vol.23 (3), p.299-337
Hauptverfasser: O’Hara, Kenton, Gonzalez, Gerardo, Penney, Graeme, Sellen, Abigail, Corish, Robert, Mentis, Helena, Varnavas, Andreas, Criminisi, Antonio, Rouncefield, Mark, Dastur, Neville, Carrell, Tom
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 299
container_title Computer supported cooperative work
container_volume 23
creator O’Hara, Kenton
Gonzalez, Gerardo
Penney, Graeme
Sellen, Abigail
Corish, Robert
Mentis, Helena
Varnavas, Andreas
Criminisi, Antonio
Rouncefield, Mark
Dastur, Neville
Carrell, Tom
description While surgical practices are increasingly reliant on a range of digital imaging technologies, the ability for clinicians to interact and manipulate these digital representations in the operating theatre using traditional touch based interaction devices is constrained by the need to maintain sterility. To overcome these concerns with sterility, a number of researchers are have been developing ways of enabling interaction in the operating theatre using touchless interaction techniques such as gesture and voice to allow clinicians control of the systems. While there have been important technical strides in the area, there has been little in the way of understanding the use of these touchless systems in practice. With this in mind we present a touchless system developed for use during vascular surgery. We deployed the system in the endovascular suite of a large hospital for use in the context of real procedures. We present findings from a study of the system in use focusing on how, with touchless interaction, the visual resources were embedded and made meaningful in the collaborative practices of surgery. In particular we discuss the importance of direct and dynamic control of the images by the clinicians in the context of talk and in the context of other artefact use as well as the work performed by members of the clinical team to make themselves sensable by the system. We discuss the broader implications of these findings for how we think about the design, evaluation and use of these systems.
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ispartof Computer supported cooperative work, 2014-06, Vol.23 (3), p.299-337
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source SpringerNature Journals
subjects Computer Science
Cooperative work
Devices
Digital imaging
Dynamic control
Dynamical systems
Dynamics
Imaging
Operating theatres
Psychology
Social Sciences
Surgery
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction
Voice
Voice control
title Interactional Order and Constructed Ways of Seeing with Touchless Imaging Systems in Surgery
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