Natural language processing and entrustable professional activity text feedback in surgery: A machine learning model of resident autonomy - 13/03/21

Abstract |
Background |
Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs) contain narrative ‘entrustment roadmaps’ designed to describe specific behaviors associated with different entrustment levels. However, these roadmaps were created using expert committee consensus, with little data available for guidance. Analysis of actual EPA assessment narrative comments using natural language processing may enhance our understanding of resident entrustment in actual practice.
Methods |
All text comments associated with EPA microassessments at a single institution were combined. EPA—entrustment level pairs (e.g. Gallbladder Disease—Level 1) were identified as documents. Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), a common machine learning algorithm, was used to identify latent topics in the documents associated with a single EPA. These topics were then reviewed for interpretability by human raters.
Results |
Over 18 months, 1015 faculty EPA microassessments were collected from 64 faculty for 80 residents. LDA analysis identified topics that mapped 1:1 to EPA entrustment levels (Gammas >0.99). These LDA topics appeared to trend coherently with entrustment levels (words demonstrating high entrustment were consistently found in high entrustment topics, word demonstrating low entrustment were found in low entrustment topics).
Conclusions |
LDA is capable of identifying topics relevant to progressive surgical entrustment and autonomy in EPA comments. These topics provide insight into key behaviors that drive different level of resident autonomy and may allow for data-driven revision of EPA entrustment maps.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | Faculty use distinct terminology when describing high vs low entrustment level behaviors. |
• | Topic modeling can discriminate between surgical EPA entrustment levels. |
• | Topics generated by LDA map coherently to EPA entrustment levels. |
Keywords : Surgery education, Natural language processing, Entrustable professional activities, Assessment, Feedback
Plan
Vol 221 - N° 2
P. 369-375 - février 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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