What Can Analytics for Teamwork Proxemics Reveal About Positioning Dynamics In Clinical Simulations?

Gloria Fernandez-Nieto, Roberto Martinez-Maldonado, Vanessa Echeverria, Kirsty Kitto, Pengcheng An, Simon Buckingham Shum

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Effective teamwork is critical to improve patient outcomes in healthcare. However, achieving this capabilityrequires that pre-service nurses develop the spatial abilities they will require in their clinical placements, suchas: learning when to remain close to the patient and to other team members; positioning themselves correctlyat the right time; and deciding on specific team formations (e.g. face-to-face or side-by-side) to enable effectiveinteraction or avoid disrupting clinical procedures. However, positioning dynamics are ephemeral and caneasily become occluded by the multiple tasks nurses have to accomplish. Digital traces automatically capturedby indoor positioning sensors can be used to address this problem for the purpose of improving nurses' reflection, learning and professional development. This paper presents; i) a qualitative study that illustrateshow to elicit spatial behaviours from educators' pedagogical expectations, and ii) a modelling approachthat transforms nurses' low-level position traces into higher-order proxemics constructs, informed by sucheducatos' expectations, in the context of simulation-based teamwork training. To illustrate our modellingapproach, we conducted an in-the-wild study with 55 undergraduate students and five educators from whompositioning traces were captured in eleven authentic nursing education classes. Low-levelx-ydata was usedto model three proxemic constructs: i) co-presence in interactional spaces, ii) socio-spatial formations (i.e.f-formations), and ii) presence in spaces of interest. Through a number of vignettes, we illustrate how indoorpositioning analytics can be used to address questions that educators and researchers have about teamwork inhealthcare simulation settings.

Original languageEnglish
Article number185
Number of pages24
JournalProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
Volume5
Issue numberCSCW1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2021
EventACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work 2021 - Online, United States of America
Duration: 23 Oct 202127 Oct 2021
Conference number: 24th
https://cscw.acm.org/2021/

Keywords

  • proxemics
  • teamwork
  • indoor positioning sensors
  • learning analytics
  • spatial behaviours

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