Healthcare and medical training have no immunity to universal, rapidly changing technology. In medical education, advances like simulations, virtual patients, and e-learning have evolved as pedagogical strategies to facilitate an active, learner-centered teaching approach. According to Chhetri et al., contemporary generations of trainees have grown up immersed in various technologies and are now less functional in the traditional classroom setting [1]. Yet, not all of today's medical trainees or educators are equally adept and comfortable with technology. Educators are tasked with selecting and filtering appropriate technology-based curricula [1]. Advancement in education requires discerning which learning-assisting technologies merit usage in specific scenarios. To better improve patient care in contemporary times, continual innovative efforts between psychiatric educators and trainees remain essential for fully exploiting technology's potential. The objective of this commentary is to discuss the various available medical training technologies and subsequent perceptions of trainees to these modalities. Additionally, this commentary considers how educationbased technologies could improve or hinder the learning experience of medical trainees.
MethodsWe conducted a review of articles published from 2007 to 2018 utilizing an online literature search with PubMed and Google Scholar, as well as a professional medical library search via the EVMS Brickell Medical Science Library System using the following key phrases: medical education or medical students and technology, e-learning, simulators, virtual reality, mobile devices, audience participation, computer based, medical illustration, or social media. To identify relevant systematic review articles, MeSH terms were also employed in the search to include these additional termsmedical students, attitude to computers, technology, computers, computer-assisted instruction, computer simulation, simulation training, internet, medical education, medical illustration, computer based, or curriculum. A second search was created to include multimedia use in medical lectures; search terms included the following: medical education, medical students and audiovisual aids, medical illustration, or educational technology. Additionally, the following MeSH terms were included in the second search: medical education, medical students, attitude to computers, multimedia, audiovisual aids, computer-based, or curriculum.Inclusion and exclusion criteria for eligibility were established; no formal scoring system was employed. Systematic reviews written in English between the years of 2007-2018 were deemed eligible via inclusion criteria if written to inform medical educators on the fields of undergraduate medical training, postgraduate medical training, or continued medical education. An article met exclusionary criteria if only contributing redundant information seen in other (included) systematic reviews or otherwise failed to meet the above conditions. One author (GB) screened titles and ab...