Tactile Knee Model Clinical Study Overview
A study published in the Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics evaluated a high-fidelity Tactile knee arthroscopy simulator (Tactile Sports Med Knee) to determine its effectiveness of such models for surgical training.
You can read the whole study here: https://esskajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jeo2.70684
Short overview of the study:
Study Design
81 participants:
41 novice
20 intermediate
20 expert
Participants performed a diagnostic knee arthroscopy task identifying key anatomical landmarks on the Tactile Arthoscopy Knee Model
Task was repeated up to 5 times to assess learning progression
Performance time and user feedback were recorded
Key Findings
The simulator clearly distinguished skill levels
Expert level partcipants completed tasks significantly faster than novice (90s vs 292s initially)
Strong learning effect
All groups improved with repetition
Novices showed the fastest early improvement
High realism and training value
Realism scores were consistently above 7/10
92–97% of participants supported its use in training programs
Consistent and reproducible training environment
Enables repeated practice without variability seen in cadavers
Conclusion
The Tactile Knee Model demonstrated a strong effect on training outcome meaning it:
Accurately reflects real-world procedures
Differentiates between experience levels
Provides meaningful training value
It was particularly effective for early-stage skill development.