Interactive web-based programs to teach functional anatomy: the pterygopalatine fossa.
Ahmet Sinav,Richard Ambron +1 more
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TL;DR: This work is designing Web-based programs that consist of high-resolution interactive bitmap illustrations, prepared using Adobe Photoshop, and vector-based animations, prepared via Macromedia Flash, to prepare a program on the pterygopalatine fossa, an important neurovascular junction in the deep face that is especially difficult to approach by dissection and to depict in static images in an atlas.
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Abstract: Certain areas of the body contain structures that are difficult to envision in their proper spatial orientations and whose functions are complex and difficult to grasp. This is especially true in the head, where many structures are relatively small and inaccessible. To address this problem, we are designing Web-based programs that consist of high-resolution interactive bitmap illustrations, prepared using Adobe Photoshop, and vector-based animations, prepared via Macromedia Flash. Flash action script language is used for the animations. We have used this approach to prepare a program on the pterygopalatine fossa, an important neurovascular junction in the deep face that is especially difficult to approach by dissection and to depict in static images in an atlas. The program can be viewed online at http://cds.osr.columbia.edu/anatomy/ppfossa/. A table of contents simplifies navigation through the program and a menu enables the user to identify each of the vascular and neuronal components and either to insert or to remove each from its position in the fossa. The functional anatomy of the nerves in the fossa is animated. For example, users can activate and subsequently follow action potentials as they course along axons to their targets. This high degree of interactivity helps promote learning.
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Citations
Three-dimensional printing in anatomy teaching: current evidence
Dimitrios Chytas,Elizabeth O. Johnson,Elizabeth O. Johnson,Maria Piagkou,George Tsakotos,George C. Babis,Vasileios S. Nikolaou,Konstantinos Markatos,Konstantinos Natsis +8 more
TL;DR: The 3DP implementation in anatomy education showed promising outcomes, but the lack of studies which compared the educational effectiveness of 3DP with that of cadavers’ dissection is highlighted; it seems that 3DP could certainly be used as an adjunct to cadaver’s dissection.
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Diffusion of innovations: anatomical informatics and iPods.
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Design and implementation of a web-based, database-driven histology atlas: technology at work.
TL;DR: Through the cooperative efforts of faculty and students, the interactive atlas evolved to meet the educational demands of medical students owing to the development and implementation of a database structure.
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Effectiveness of human anatomy education for pharmacy students via the Internet.
TL;DR: Comparison of course and instructor evaluations showed that students in the distance course held similar or more positive perceptions of the course than their campus peers, suggesting that a distance-based course can be used to teach human anatomy to pharmacy students.
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Holger Jastrow,Lutz Vollrath +1 more
TL;DR: This article reviews online (Internet) anatomy projects and multimedia productions based on the Visible Human Project (VHP) of the United States National Library of Medicine on the teaching of 3D anatomy using the digitized sections of the visible human male and female.
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Analysis of medical students' use of web-based resources for a gross anatomy and embryology course.
Gary L. Nieder,Frank Nagy +1 more
TL;DR: An extensive Web site supporting the authors' gross anatomy and embryology course, which includes various course management pages as well as online lectures, has been in use for the past 2 years and showed that all of the resources available online, including course management information, exam reviews, Online lectures, and dissection guides were heavily used and deemed useful by students.
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