R
Ryan Brydges
Researcher at University of Toronto
Publications - 115
Citations - 7842
Ryan Brydges is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Self-regulated learning. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 100 publications receiving 6547 citations. Previous affiliations of Ryan Brydges include Mayo Clinic & University of British Columbia.
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Is there inter-procedural transfer of skills in intraocular surgery? A randomized controlled trial.
TL;DR: To investigate how experience in simulated cataract surgery impacts and transfers to the learning curves for novices in vitreoretinal surgery, a simulation of eye surgery is conducted.
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Do not teach me while I am working
TL;DR: Senior trainees have superior capacity to multitask, which may have direct implications on both clinical and simulation-based education, such that educators need to adjust the amount of information presented in accordance to trainees' levels of training.
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The impact of critical event checklists on medical management and teamwork during simulated crises in a surgical daycare facility.
Tobias Everett,Pamela J. Morgan,Ryan Brydges,Matt M. Kurrek,Deborah Tregunno,L. Cunningham,A. Chan,D. Forde,Jordan Tarshis +8 more
TL;DR: Critical events checklists do not improve medical management or teamwork during simulated operating theatre crises in an ambulatory surgical daycare setting.
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Construct validity of computer-assisted assessment: quantification of movement processes during a vascular anastomosis on a live porcine model.
TL;DR: The findings support a novel form of construct validity the for surgical assessment device, the concept of transfer of skills, and the use of computer evaluations for the assessment of technical skills embedded within complex surgical tasks.
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Surface exploration using laparoscopic surgical instruments: The perception of surface roughness
TL;DR: Results showed that participants were able to judge the roughness of the sandpaper surfaces when using both the finger and the instrument, however, post hoc comparisons showed that perceptual judgements of surface texture were altered in the no vision condition compared to the vision condition.