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Objective: We hypothesized that learning through multiple sensory modalities would improve knowledge recall and recognition in orthopedic surgery residents and medical students.
Design: We developed a virtual study assistant, named Socratic Artificial Intelligence Learning (SAIL), based on a custom-built natural language processing algorithm. SAIL draws from practice questions approved by the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery and quizzes users through a conversational, voice-enabled Web interface. We performed a randomized controlled study using a within-subjects, repeated measures design.
Setting: Participants first took a pretest to assess their baseline knowledge. They then underwent 10 days of spaced repetition training with practice questions using 3 modalities: oral response, typed response, and multiple-choice. Recall and recognition of the practiced knowledge were assessed via a post-test administered on the first day, first week, and 2 months after the training period.
Participants: Twenty-four volunteers, who were medical students and orthopedic surgery residents at multiple US medical institutions.
Results: The oral, typed, and multiple-choice modalities produced similar recall and recognition rates. Although participants preferred using the traditional multiple-choice modality to study for standardized examinations, many were interested in supplementing their study routine with SAIL and believe that SAIL may improve their performance on written and oral examinations.
Conclusions: SAIL is not inferior to the multiple-choice modality for learning orthopedic core knowledge. These results indicate that SAIL can be used to supplement traditional study methods. COMPETENCIES: medical knowledge; practice-based learning and improvement.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsurg.2024.08.006 | DOI Listing |
Zhonghua Jie He He Hu Xi Za Zhi
September 2025
Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, the First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, National Center for Respiratory Medicine, National Clinical Research Center for Respiratory Disease, State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease, Guangzhou Institute of Respiratory He
Cough is a common symptom of many respiratory diseases, and parameters such as frequency, intensity, type and duration play important roles in disease screening, diagnosis and prognosis. Among these, cough frequency is the most widely applied metric. In current clinical practice, cough severity is primarily assessed based on patients' subjective symptom descriptions in combination with semi-structured questionnaires.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHippocampus
September 2025
Center for Neuroscience & Center for Mind and Brain, Department of Psychology, Davis, California, USA.
Our understanding of how the medial temporal lobe (MTL) contributes to human cognition has advanced enormously over the past half a century. My work in the 1990s characterizing the role of recollection and familiarity processes in episodic memory led me to study the MTL's role in these two memory processes. In the current paper, I provide a personal commentary in which I describe the motivating ideas, as well as the invaluable impact of mentors, colleagues, and students that led to a series of studies showing that conscious recollection is critically dependent on the hippocampus, whereas familiarity-based judgments are dependent on regions such as the perirhinal cortex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
August 2025
Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, United States.
Mentalizing skills-the capacity to attribute mental states-play critical roles in word learning during typical language development. In autism, mentalizing difficulties may constrain word-learning pathways, limiting language-acquisition opportunities. We ask how autistic children encode and retrieve novel words and what drives individual differences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Neurosci
August 2025
Memory Research Laboratory, Brain Institute and Department of Physiology and Behavior, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, Brazil.
Object recognition memory (ORM) allows animals to distinguish between novel and familiar items. When reactivated during recall in the presence of a novel object, a consolidated ORM can be destabilized and linked to that generated by the novel object through reconsolidation. The CA1 region of the dorsal hippocampus contributes to ORM destabilization and reconsolidation, with mechanisms involving theta/gamma cross-frequency coupling (hPAC) and synaptic plasticity modulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectromagn Biol Med
September 2025
Computer Science and Business Systems, Sri Krishna College of Engineering and Technology, Coimbatore, India.
Subject-independent emotion detection using EEG (Electroencephalography) using Vibrational Mode Decomposition and deep learning is made possible by the scarcity of labelled EEG datasets encompassing a variety of emotions. Labelled EEG data collection over a wide range of emotional states from a broad and varied population is challenging and resource-intensive. As a result, models trained on small or biased datasets may fail to generalize well to unknown individuals or emotional states, resulting in lower accuracy and robustness in real-world applications.
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