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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Engineering

Series

2016

Fetal heart rate

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Categorizing Fetal Heart Rate Variability With And Without Visual Aids, Amanda J. Ashdown, Mark W. Scerbo, Lee A. Belfore Ii, Stephen S. Davis, Alfred Z. Abuhamad Jan 2016

Categorizing Fetal Heart Rate Variability With And Without Visual Aids, Amanda J. Ashdown, Mark W. Scerbo, Lee A. Belfore Ii, Stephen S. Davis, Alfred Z. Abuhamad

Psychology Faculty Publications

Objective This study examined the ability of clinicians to correctly categorize images of fetal heart rate (FHR) variability with and without the use of exemplars.

Study Design A sample of 33 labor and delivery clinicians inspected static FHR images and categorized them into one of four categories defined by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) based on the amount of variability within absent, minimal, moderate, or marked ranges. Participants took part in three conditions: two in which they used exemplars representing FHR variability near the center or near the boundaries of each range, and a third …


The Influence Of A Crosshair Visual Aid On Observer Detection Of Simulated Fetal Heart Rate Signals, Rebecca A. Kennedy, Mark W. Scerbo, Brittany L. Anderson-Montoya, Lee A. Belfore Ii, Alfred Z. Abuhamad, Stephen S. Davis Jan 2016

The Influence Of A Crosshair Visual Aid On Observer Detection Of Simulated Fetal Heart Rate Signals, Rebecca A. Kennedy, Mark W. Scerbo, Brittany L. Anderson-Montoya, Lee A. Belfore Ii, Alfred Z. Abuhamad, Stephen S. Davis

Psychology Faculty Publications

Objective To determine whether a visual aid overlaid on fetal heart rate (FHR) tracings increases detection of critical signals relative to images with no visual aid.

Study Design In an experimental study, 21 undergraduate students viewed 240 images of simulated FHR tracings twice, once with the visual aids and once without aids. Performance was examined for images containing three different types of FHR signals (early deceleration, late deceleration, and acceleration) and four different FHR signal-to-noise ratios corresponding to FHR variability types (absent, minimal, moderate, and marked) identified by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (2008). Performance was …