The effect of magnification on student performance in pediatric operative dentistry.

J Dent Educ

Department of Pediatric Dentistry, School of Dentistry, University of Detroit Mercy, MI 48219-0900, USA.

Published: November 1998

Previous research has shown that accurate student self-evaluation is related to higher quality dental products. Variance in student performance still remains. Enhancement of visual perception could contribute to product improvement. Only one study has evaluated the effects of magnification on simulated dental patient care. The present study sought to determine if magnification had a positive effect on student-generated products in pediatric amalgam preparations. Fifty-two third-year students were randomly assigned to experimental (magnification) or control (no magnification) groups. Members of the experimental group used magnification in their daily work in the pediatric dentistry clinic. No significant differences between the groups' preparations or evaluations of standard preparations were found. Further study should address these issues: 1) possible effects of specific training in the use of magnification devices; 2) whether the tolerance for error in dental preparations is so great that finer vision contributes little to product improvement; 3) the role of tactile sensation in evaluation and preparation; and 4) the possible benefits of magnification for effect of age. Based on this study, it seems that requiring students to purchase magnification devices may not be justified.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

magnification
9
student performance
8
product improvement
8
magnification devices
8
magnification student
4
performance pediatric
4
pediatric operative
4
operative dentistry
4
dentistry previous
4
previous accurate
4

Similar Publications

Background: Recurrent early pregnancy loss [rEPL] is a traumatic experience, marked by feelings such as grief and depression, and often anxiety. Despite this, the psychological consequences of rEPL are often overlooked, particularly when considering future reproductive health or approaching subsequent pregnancies. The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic led to significant reconfiguration of maternity care and a negative impact on the perinatal experience, but the specific impact on women's experience of rEPL has yet to be explored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biological applications using multiphoton microscopy increasingly seek a larger field of view while maintaining sufficient temporal sampling to observe dynamic biological processes. Multiphoton imaging also requires high numerical aperture microscope objectives to realize efficient non-linear excitation and collection of fluorescence. This combination of low-magnification and high-numerical aperture poses a challenge for system design.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Synthetic aperture X-ray ghost imaging (SAXGI) is proposed to achieve megapixel X-ray ghost imaging together with a reduced number of measurements. As the bucket detector array is artificially generated by post-pixel-binning of the images collected with the same detector as that in the reference arm, the unique advantages of SAXGI are not verified experimentally. In this paper, we developed a systematic solution of the experimental implementation of SAXGI, with the automatic interchange of 2× and 20× optical magnification of the detector for object and reference signal acquisition respectively, together with electronic pixel-binning of the detector.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This work presents a method for simulating digital lensless holographic microscopy (DLHM) holograms using a physics-based image processing approach. While DLHM has gained significant attention in biology, biomedicine, and environmental monitoring, the current modeling of DLHM holograms has been limited, hindering potential applications, including learning-based solutions and generative model training. In this study, the DLHM propagation process is decomposed into the diffraction of a complex-valued spherical wavefront and the non-homogeneous magnification of the diffracted field that encodes the sample information, which accelerates and enhances the hologram simulation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Specimen-induced aberrations limit the penetration depth of standard optical imaging techniques in vivo, mainly due to the propagation of high NA beams in a non-homogenous medium. Overcoming these limitations requires complex optical imaging systems and techniques. Implantable high NA micro-optics can be a solution to tissue induced spherical aberrations, but in order to be implanted, they need to have reduced complexity, offering a lower surface to the host immune reaction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!