Presentation + Paper
15 February 2021 Employing eye tracking to identify the onset of fatigue in Digital Breast Tomosynthesis (DBT) readers for a national breast cancer screening programme
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The UK national screening program for breast cancer currently uses Full Field Digital Mammography (FFDM). Various studies have shown that DBT has a higher sensitivity and specificity in identifying early breast cancer apart from benign pathologies, even in very dense breasts. This potentially makes DBT a better screening modality to detect early breast cancer, as well as minimize false positive recall rates. However, DBT has multiple image slices and thereby makes reading cases inherently a longer and potentially more visually fatiguing task. Our previous studies (Dong et al, 2017 and 2018) have demonstrated the impact of institutional training on reading techniques in DBT. The reading technique itself appears to have an effect on total reading time. In other follow-on studies we have employed eye tracking which gives rise to complex data sets, including parameters such as eyelid opening and pupil diameter measures, which can then be employed to gauge blinks and fatigue onset. Findings from this work have guided changes in our blink identification techniques and we have now developed semi-automated programmed processes which can analyze the large data set and provide a more accurate assessment of fatigue and vigilance parameters through blink detection. Here, we have considered ‘eyelid opening’ parameters of both the left and the right eye separately. Having such a separated approach allowed us to tease out particular aspects of blinking. Similar to Schleicher et al (2008), we found there to be ultra-short blinks (30-50 milli seconds), short blinks (51- 100 msecs), long blinks (101-500 msecs) and also microsleeps (>500 msecs). We argue that the changes observed in the frequencies of these blinks can be used as a measure of vigilance and fatigue during DBT reading.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Dorina Roy, Amanda Koh, Alastair Gale, Peter Phillips, William Teh, Michael Michell, Nisha Sharma, Iain Darker, Mitchell Searjeant, Ellhia Sudin, and Yan Chen "Employing eye tracking to identify the onset of fatigue in Digital Breast Tomosynthesis (DBT) readers for a national breast cancer screening programme", Proc. SPIE 11599, Medical Imaging 2021: Image Perception, Observer Performance, and Technology Assessment, 115990T (15 February 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2580968
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KEYWORDS
Digital breast tomosynthesis

Breast cancer

Eye

Digital mammography

Pathology

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