Sonographers use psychomotor skills to perform medical ultrasound examinations. Psychomotor skills describe voluntary movements of the limb, joints, and muscles in response to sensory stimuli and are regulated by the motor neural cortex in the brain. We define a psychomotor skill in relation to medical ultrasound imaging as "the unique mental and motor activities required to execute a manual task safely and efficiently for each clinical situation." Skills in clinical ultrasound practice may be open or closed; most skills used in medical ultrasound imaging are open. Open skills are both complex and multidimensional. Visuomotor and visuospatial psychomotor skills are central components of medical ultrasound imaging. Both types of skills rely on learners having a visual exemplar or standard of performance with which to reference their skill performance and evaluate anatomic structures. These are imperative instructional design principles when teaching psychomotor skills.
History
Journal
Journal of ultrasound in medicine
Volume
33
Pagination
1349-1352
Location
Chichester, Eng.
ISSN
0278-4297
eISSN
1550-9613
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2016, the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine