Comparison of a virtual microscope laboratory to a regular microscope laboratory for teaching histology

Emerging technology now exists to digitize a gigabyte of information from a glass slide, save it in a highly compressed file format, and deliver it over the web. By accessing these images with a standard web browser and viewer plug‐in, a computer can emulate a real microscope and glass slide. Using this new technology, the immediate aims of our project were to digitize the glass slides from urinary tract, male genital, and endocrine units and implement them in the Spring 2000 Histology course at the University of Iowa, and to carry out a formative evaluation of the virtual slides of these three units in a side‐by‐side comparison with the regular microscope laboratory. The methods and results of this paper will describe the technology employed to create the virtual slides, and the formative evaluation carried out in the course. Anat Rec (New Anat) 265:10–14, 2001. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

[1]  Joan,et al.  n An Ethnographic , Controlled Study of the Use of a Computer-based Histology Atlas during a Laboratory Course , 2022 .

[2]  John R. Cotter Histology on the World Wide Web: A Digest of Resources for Students and Teachers , 1997 .

[3]  David Jarjoura,et al.  A comparison of interactive computerized medical education software with a more traditional teaching format , 1997 .

[4]  J R Cotter Computer‐assisted instruction for the medical histology course at SUNY at Buffalo , 1997, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[5]  T Bacro,et al.  Web‐delivery of anatomy video clips using a CD‐ROM , 2000, The Anatomical record.

[6]  Lothar Hennighausen,et al.  The interactive web-based histology atlas system , 2000, Oncogene.

[7]  V. Spitzer,et al.  The visible human dataset: The anatomical platform for human simulation , 1998, The Anatomical record.

[8]  Harold P. Lehmann,et al.  Research Paper: An Ethnographic, Controlled Study of the Use of a Computer-based Histology Atlas during a Laboratory Course , 1999, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[9]  R B Trelease,et al.  Going virtual with quicktime VR: New methods and standardized tools for interactive dynamic visualization of anatomical structures , 2000, The Anatomical record.

[10]  M Mars,et al.  Students' perceptions of a multimedia computer-aided instruction resource in histology. , 1996, South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde.