Developing Expertise in 1H NMR Spectral
Interpretation
Posted on 2020-12-23 - 19:12
Advancements in organic chemistry depend upon chemists’
ability to interpret NMR spectra, though research demonstrates that
cultivating such proficiency requires years of graduate-level study.
The organic chemistry community thus needs insight into how this expertise
develops to expedite learning among its newest members. This study
investigated undergraduate and doctoral chemistry students’
understanding and information processing during the interpretation
of 1H NMR spectra and complementary IR spectra. Eighteen
undergraduate and seven doctoral chemistry students evaluated the
outcome of a series of syntheses using spectra corresponding to the
products. Eye movements were measured to identify differences in cognitive
processes between undergraduate and doctoral participants, and interviews
were conducted to elucidate the chemical assumptions that guided participants’
reasoning. Results suggest five areas of understanding are necessary
for interpreting spectra, and progress in understanding corresponds
to increasing knowledge of experimental and implicit chemical variables.
Undergraduate participants exhibited uninformed bidirectional processing
of all information, whereas doctoral participants exhibited informed
unidirectional processing of relevant information. These findings
imply the community can support novices’ development of expertise
by cultivating relevant understanding and encouraging use of informed
interpretation strategies, including preliminary evaluation of relevant
variables, prediction of expected spectral features, and search for
complementary data across spectra.
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Connor, Megan
C.; Glass, Benjamin H.; Finkenstaedt-Quinn, Solaire A.; Shultz, Ginger V. (2020). Developing Expertise in 1H NMR Spectral
Interpretation. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.0c01398