Development of subliminal persuasion system to improve the upper limb posture in laparoscopic training: a preliminary study
Development of subliminal persuasion system to improve the upper limb posture in laparoscopic training: a preliminary study
Purpose: current training for laparoscopy focuses only on the enhancement of manual skill and does not give advice on improving trainees’ posture. However, a poor posture can result in increased static muscle loading, faster fatigue, and impaired psychomotor task performance. In this paper, the authors propose a method, named subliminal persuasion, which gives the trainee real-time advice for correcting the upper limb posture during laparoscopic training like the expert but leads to a lower increment in the workload.
Methods: a 9-axis inertial measurement unit was used to compute the upper limb posture, and a Detection Reaction Time device was developed and used to measure the workload. A monitor displayed not only images from laparoscope, but also a visual stimulus, a transparent red cross superimposed to the laparoscopic images, when the trainee had incorrect upper limb posture. One group was exposed, when their posture was not correct during training, to a short (about 33 ms) subliminal visual stimulus. The control group instead was exposed to longer (about 660 ms) supraliminal visual stimuli.
Results: we found that subliminal visual stimulation is a valid method to improve trainees’ upper limb posture during laparoscopic training. Moreover, the additional workload required for subconscious processing of subliminal visual stimuli is less than the one required for supraliminal visual stimuli, which is processed instead at the conscious level.
Conclusions: we propose subliminal persuasion as a method to give subconscious real-time stimuli to improve upper limb posture during laparoscopic training. Its effectiveness and efficiency were confirmed against supraliminal stimuli transmitted at the conscious level: Subliminal persuasion improved upper limb posture of trainees, with a smaller increase on the overall workload.
Laparoscopy, Subliminal persuasion, Subliminal visual stimuli, Supraliminal visual stimuli, Workload
1863-1871
Zhang, Di
14bfc4a0-150b-4738-b76f-6179d2b789b8
Sessa, Salvatore
dae18bb6-4a40-4581-8c50-f0faa16841df
Kong, Weisheng
808d478a-54c0-4ff4-b1df-6103d7d92703
Magistro, Daniele
ab9296bc-fda6-469e-a3f8-3a574faa1b7e
Zecca, Massimiliano
870c8b27-684b-42b3-baed-40dd996c2800
Takanishi, Atsuo
856a12a7-dd3f-4f1f-ae54-1fb62989db20
1 November 2015
Zhang, Di
14bfc4a0-150b-4738-b76f-6179d2b789b8
Sessa, Salvatore
dae18bb6-4a40-4581-8c50-f0faa16841df
Kong, Weisheng
808d478a-54c0-4ff4-b1df-6103d7d92703
Magistro, Daniele
ab9296bc-fda6-469e-a3f8-3a574faa1b7e
Zecca, Massimiliano
870c8b27-684b-42b3-baed-40dd996c2800
Takanishi, Atsuo
856a12a7-dd3f-4f1f-ae54-1fb62989db20
Zhang, Di, Sessa, Salvatore, Kong, Weisheng, Magistro, Daniele, Zecca, Massimiliano and Takanishi, Atsuo
(2015)
Development of subliminal persuasion system to improve the upper limb posture in laparoscopic training: a preliminary study.
International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery, 10 (11), .
(doi:10.1007/s11548-015-1198-x).
Abstract
Purpose: current training for laparoscopy focuses only on the enhancement of manual skill and does not give advice on improving trainees’ posture. However, a poor posture can result in increased static muscle loading, faster fatigue, and impaired psychomotor task performance. In this paper, the authors propose a method, named subliminal persuasion, which gives the trainee real-time advice for correcting the upper limb posture during laparoscopic training like the expert but leads to a lower increment in the workload.
Methods: a 9-axis inertial measurement unit was used to compute the upper limb posture, and a Detection Reaction Time device was developed and used to measure the workload. A monitor displayed not only images from laparoscope, but also a visual stimulus, a transparent red cross superimposed to the laparoscopic images, when the trainee had incorrect upper limb posture. One group was exposed, when their posture was not correct during training, to a short (about 33 ms) subliminal visual stimulus. The control group instead was exposed to longer (about 660 ms) supraliminal visual stimuli.
Results: we found that subliminal visual stimulation is a valid method to improve trainees’ upper limb posture during laparoscopic training. Moreover, the additional workload required for subconscious processing of subliminal visual stimuli is less than the one required for supraliminal visual stimuli, which is processed instead at the conscious level.
Conclusions: we propose subliminal persuasion as a method to give subconscious real-time stimuli to improve upper limb posture during laparoscopic training. Its effectiveness and efficiency were confirmed against supraliminal stimuli transmitted at the conscious level: Subliminal persuasion improved upper limb posture of trainees, with a smaller increase on the overall workload.
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 March 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 October 2015
Published date: 1 November 2015
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, CARS.
Keywords:
Laparoscopy, Subliminal persuasion, Subliminal visual stimuli, Supraliminal visual stimuli, Workload
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510669
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510669
ISSN: 1861-6410
PURE UUID: c8648ae8-0549-4473-be92-4e0843382fdf
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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2026 16:35
Last modified: 17 Apr 2026 02:16
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Contributors
Author:
Di Zhang
Author:
Salvatore Sessa
Author:
Weisheng Kong
Author:
Daniele Magistro
Author:
Massimiliano Zecca
Author:
Atsuo Takanishi
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