The purpose of this study was to determine the inter-rater reliability of arthroscopic video quality, determine correlation between surgeon rating and computational image metrics, and facilitate a quantitative methodology for assessing video quality. Methods: Five orthopaedic surgeons reviewed 60 clips from deidentified arthroscopic shoulder videos and rated each on a four-point Likert scale from poor to excellent view. The videos were randomized, and the process was completed a total of three times. Each user rating was averaged to provide a user rating per clip. Each video frame was processed to calculate brightness, local contrast, redness (used to represent bleeding), and image entropy. Each metric was then averaged over each frame per video clip, providing four image quality metrics per clip. Results: Interrater reliability for grading video quality had an intraclass correlation of .974. Improved image quality rating was positively correlated with increased entropy (.8142; P < .001), contrast (.8013; P < .001), and brightness (.6120; P < .001), and negatively correlated with redness (À.8626; P < .001). A multiple linear regression model was calculated with the image metrics used as predictors for the image quality ranking, with an R-squared value of .775 and root mean square error of .42. Conclusion: Our study demonstrates strong inter-rater reliability between surgeons when describing image quality and strong correlations between image quality and the computed image metrics. A model based on these metrics enables automatic quantification of image quality.
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