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Abstract
The authors investigated how training and experience affect the performance of observers
searching mammograms for breast masses.
Eye positions of mammographers, mammography technologists, mammography residents,
and laypersons were compared to scan paths generated by a simulated scanner as each
searched nine two-view digital mammogram pairs for breast masses.
Analysis of time-to-hit data revealed that mammographers and mammography technologists
with the most extensive training and experience had the fastest search times in the
detection and confirmation of a breast mass on two views. Scanning patterns of less-experienced
mammography residents were less efficient due to wider dispersion of visual attention
between potential breast masses and perturbations in breast parenchyma. Because laypersons
lacked both training and experience in mammography, bright blobs in the breast image
were considered to be intuitively valid target candidates and these features distracted
the search by capturing visual attention.
Experience reading normal and abnormal mammograms plays a critical role in training
radiologists. Experience combined with training provides the basis for generating
efficient visual search strategies and developing distinctive conceptual criteria
for perceptual differentiation and interpretation of true breast masses from image
artifacts and structured noise that mimics breast abnormalities.