Standard
Virtual Reality in Surgery: Between Satisfaction and Stress. /
Sas, Corina; Reilly, R.; O'Hare, G.M.P.
Virtual Reality. Cognitive Foundations, Technological Issues, and Philosophical Implications. ed. / A. Riegler; M.F. Peschl; K. Edlinger; G. Fleck; W. Fleigl. Frankfurt/M: Peter Lang Verlag, 2001. p. 99-111.
Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Chapter
Harvard
Sas, C, Reilly, R & O'Hare, GMP 2001,
Virtual Reality in Surgery: Between Satisfaction and Stress. in A Riegler, MF Peschl, K Edlinger, G Fleck & W Fleigl (eds),
Virtual Reality. Cognitive Foundations, Technological Issues, and Philosophical Implications. Peter Lang Verlag, Frankfurt/M, pp. 99-111.
APA
Sas, C., Reilly, R., & O'Hare, G. M. P. (2001).
Virtual Reality in Surgery: Between Satisfaction and Stress. In A. Riegler, M. F. Peschl, K. Edlinger, G. Fleck, & W. Fleigl (Eds.),
Virtual Reality. Cognitive Foundations, Technological Issues, and Philosophical Implications (pp. 99-111). Peter Lang Verlag.
Vancouver
Sas C, Reilly R, O'Hare GMP.
Virtual Reality in Surgery: Between Satisfaction and Stress. In Riegler A, Peschl MF, Edlinger K, Fleck G, Fleigl W, editors, Virtual Reality. Cognitive Foundations, Technological Issues, and Philosophical Implications. Frankfurt/M: Peter Lang Verlag. 2001. p. 99-111
Author
Bibtex
@inbook{13068487b851413d91abe808f51ea0a2,
title = "Virtual Reality in Surgery: Between Satisfaction and Stress",
abstract = "The present study is focused on usability issues related to laparoscopy, emphasizing the surgeon{\textquoteright}s overall satisfaction with the mediated perception of reality. We were particularly interested in assessing the differences between this mini-invasive surgical technique and classical surgery, trying to underline both its advantages and limits. We also tried to evaluate the level of stress induced by this method, among the surgeons who use it on a regular basis, together with the adopted coping strategies. Laparoscopy, even though grounded in classical surgery, has its own distinctive features, which require flexibility in order to facilitate the transfer of skills. Despite its limited range of applicability, used discriminatively and carefully, together with well-organized training sessions, this technique can bring satisfaction to both surgeon and patient.",
keywords = "cs_eprint_id, 2118 cs_uid, 391",
author = "Corina Sas and R. Reilly and G.M.P. O'Hare",
year = "2001",
language = "English",
pages = "99--111",
editor = "A. Riegler and M.F. Peschl and K. Edlinger and G. Fleck and W. Fleigl",
booktitle = "Virtual Reality. Cognitive Foundations, Technological Issues, and Philosophical Implications",
publisher = "Peter Lang Verlag",
}
RIS
TY - CHAP
T1 - Virtual Reality in Surgery: Between Satisfaction and Stress
AU - Sas, Corina
AU - Reilly, R.
AU - O'Hare, G.M.P.
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - The present study is focused on usability issues related to laparoscopy, emphasizing the surgeon’s overall satisfaction with the mediated perception of reality. We were particularly interested in assessing the differences between this mini-invasive surgical technique and classical surgery, trying to underline both its advantages and limits. We also tried to evaluate the level of stress induced by this method, among the surgeons who use it on a regular basis, together with the adopted coping strategies. Laparoscopy, even though grounded in classical surgery, has its own distinctive features, which require flexibility in order to facilitate the transfer of skills. Despite its limited range of applicability, used discriminatively and carefully, together with well-organized training sessions, this technique can bring satisfaction to both surgeon and patient.
AB - The present study is focused on usability issues related to laparoscopy, emphasizing the surgeon’s overall satisfaction with the mediated perception of reality. We were particularly interested in assessing the differences between this mini-invasive surgical technique and classical surgery, trying to underline both its advantages and limits. We also tried to evaluate the level of stress induced by this method, among the surgeons who use it on a regular basis, together with the adopted coping strategies. Laparoscopy, even though grounded in classical surgery, has its own distinctive features, which require flexibility in order to facilitate the transfer of skills. Despite its limited range of applicability, used discriminatively and carefully, together with well-organized training sessions, this technique can bring satisfaction to both surgeon and patient.
KW - cs_eprint_id
KW - 2118 cs_uid
KW - 391
M3 - Chapter
SP - 99
EP - 111
BT - Virtual Reality. Cognitive Foundations, Technological Issues, and Philosophical Implications
A2 - Riegler, A.
A2 - Peschl, M.F.
A2 - Edlinger, K.
A2 - Fleck, G.
A2 - Fleigl, W.
PB - Peter Lang Verlag
CY - Frankfurt/M
ER -