The aim of this study was to explore if screeners showed differences in subjective fatigue, blink metrics and diagnostic accuracy during a DBT reading session with and without breaks. Prospective study including 45 participants from 6 different hospital sites around England between December 2020 to April 2022. Non-intrusive, screen mounted eye tracking cameras (60Hz sampling rate) were set up in the participant’s natural reading environment. Forty DBT cases were read in a random order (47.5% malignant, 12.5% benign, 40% normal). Each breast was rated as normal or benign (return to screen) or indeterminate, suspicious or highly suspicious (recall). Twenty-one participants had a break at approximately 40 minutes into the session. Participants without a break showed a significantly greater difference in subjective fatigue before and after the reporting session (44% vs 33%, p=0.037). Furthermore, those without breaks exhibited significantly greater blinks per minute (15.75 vs 13.25, p<0.001) and blink duration (milliseconds) (296 vs 286, p<0.001). There was no significant difference in overall accuracy between the cohorts (p=0.921). Blink metrics have the potential to be used in identifying early onset of fatigue during reading sessions. |
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