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the productions to other similar tasks, in eliminating
sub-goals and in strengthening the productions. The
ability, which determines this phase’s performance,
is the ability to compare the stored information with
the information about the new situation and to act
based on the outcome of this comparison. These are
defined as psychosensoric abilities (Ackerman,
1988).
In the last phase, which is called autonomous
processing, learners thoroughly understand the task
and have developed efficient productions that can be
performed automatically without or with only few
attentional/cognitive demands. Performing the task
is thus fast and accurate and the performance is only
limited by psychomotor abilities (Ackerman, 1988).
2.2 Factors influencing the
prototypical skill acquisition
process
This description of a skill acquisition process is only
prototypical. As already mentioned cognitive
abilities for example influence the way to learn, so
that interindividual differences result in qualitatively
different skill acquisition processes. However, not
only characteristics of the learner but also the ones
of the task influence the way to learn.
2.2.1 Characteristics of the task
A more complex task is – generally speaking – a
more difficult one, which results in a prolonged
cognitive and associative phase, so that the overall
skill acquisition process takes longer. Regarding the
robot-based spine surgery this has two major
consequences: first, the learning process is shortened
if its productions are less complex and second the
learning process can further be simplified if the
tool’s application is made less complex. A
comparison between the traditional way to perform
surgery and the robot-based one reveals that some
components are added to the traditional way, which
make it more difficult. The surgeon for example has
to “explain” the ITD on a 3D model of the patient,
where the hole should be ideally placed. However,
very difficult components are no longer needed.
When operating with the ITD the surgeon no longer
needs to consider the drill’s resistance in order to
figure out whether he or she is drilling at the right
spot or not. This is a great relief for the surgeon. An
exact and enclosing comparison of both methods is
out of the scope of this article, however it reveals
that the robot-based surgery is altogether less
complex, so that it can be inferred that the skill
acquisition process is shortened.
Task consistency refers to the number of
invariant rules for completing the task in question
successfully (Ackerman, 1987). If the task is
inconsistent, no general valid productions can be
generated, so that the task cannot be acquired. As the
ITD is used in a critical medical context, the rules
for deciding when a given production is to be used
must be highly consistent, so that learning takes
place.
2.2.2 Characteristics of the learner
Interindividual differences do determine
performance during the skill acquisition process:
cognitive abilities influencing the first,
psychosensoric the second and psychomotor abilities
the third phase of the skill acquisition process. The
first two refer to intelligence. The model of
intelligence on which the study is based on is the
Berlin Intelligence Structure Model developed by
Jäger (1982). This hierarchical model distinguishes
between two facets: operations and contents. The
contents refer to the type of material that must be
processed; the operations define what must be done
with the content. The figural content determines
performance during surgery. It for example requires
the surgeons to interpret the information on two-
dimensional X-rays three-dimensionally. An
operation is for example reasoning, which refers to
the ability to solve problems. Perceptual speed,
another operation, is related to the speed of the work
on simple, cognitive tasks. As this description
shows, the latter operation is closely related to the
cognitive requirements in the second phase,
reasoning to the requirements in the first phase.
How does the skill acquisition process change
when comparing two learners, one with high
reasoning, figural abilities, and perceptual speed,
and the other one with low abilities? Learners who
are more able show greater performance levels and
thus proceed to the next phase faster, because they
build productions that are more exact faster. As in
the next phase, this ability no longer predicts
performance and interindividual performance
differences are then balanced, if the learners have
the same level of the ability influencing performance
in the next phase. However, the advantage, the more
able learners have already gained, will not be caught
up by the others, so that learners with higher ability
levels have a general shorter and steeper learning
curve.
The individual differences in both the
performance level and the time needed to reach the
level where the next phase starts can be reduced if
the abilities underlying the first and second phase
can be made less important. As already described, an
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