| Literature DB >> 27881121 |
Jan Kiesewetter1, Rene Ebersbach2, Nike Tsalas3, Matthias Holzer2, Ralf Schmidmaier2,4, Martin R Fischer2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical reasoning is a key competence in medicine. There is a lack of knowledge, how non-experts like medical students solve clinical problems. It is known that they have difficulties applying conceptual knowledge to clinical cases, that they lack metacognitive awareness and that higher level cognitive actions correlate with diagnostic accuracy. However, the role of conceptual, strategic, conditional, and metacognitive knowledge for clinical reasoning is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical reasoning; Diagnostic reasoning; Knowledge categories; Medical problem-solving; Metacognition
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27881121 PMCID: PMC5121948 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0821-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Diagnostic knowledge dimensions according to Schmidmaier [7], van Gog [9], Krathwohl [10]
| Knowledge dimension | Definition | Examples of knowledge |
|---|---|---|
| Conceptual Knowledge | The basic elements one must know to be acquainted with a discipline or solve problems in it. | Knowledge of terminology, specific details, and elements. |
| Strategic Knowledge | How to execute something; methods of inquiry, and criteria for using skills, algorithms, techniques and methods. | Knowledge of subject-specific skills and algorithms, subject-specific techniques and methods, and criteria for determining when to use appropriate procedures. Knowledge about problem solving |
| Conditional Knowledge | The interrelationships among the basic elements within a larger structure that enable them to function together. | Knowledge of classifications and categories, principles and generalizations, theories, models, and structures. Knowledge about the rationale behind. |
| Metacognitive Knowledge | How to think about thinking; knowledge about cognitive tasks, and self-knowledge | Knowledge about cognition in general as well as awareness of one’s own knowledge. Knowledge about one’s own cognition |
Operationalized definition of the diagnostic knowledge dimensions
| Dimension | Operationalized definition and examples |
|---|---|
| Conceptual knowledge, “what”- information | Statements of facts, repeated information. Causal knowledge or deductive reasoning without explanations. |
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| Strategic knowledge, “how”-information | Knowledge about actions. Explanations, why one prefers this action. Strategic use of concepts. |
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| Conditional knowledge, “why”-information | Relationships between facts. Inductive reasoning, several facts are taken together in order to derive a judgement. Explanations of concepts without strategic use of those concepts. |
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| Metacognitive knowledge “selfcognition” -information | The meta-level (metacognition) receives information from object-level (case-work). Consciousness about information and state of cognitions. Summaries and assessment of information, self-assessment, comparison of new information with the mental representation of the case. The meta-level (metacognition) modifies the object-level (case-work). Intervention into the process of working on the case. Something changes, or not, but with intention. |
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Fig. 1Overview of the study
Descriptive data of diagnostic knowledge dimensions used by medical students during the cases
| Knowledge dimension | Frequency | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| Conceptual knowledge (CcK) | 432 | 44% |
| CcK only | 325 | 33% |
| With other knowledge dimensions | 107 | 11% |
| Strategic knowledge (SK) | 349 | 36% |
| SK only | 279 | 28% |
| With other knowledge dimensions | 70 | 8% |
| Conditional knowledge (CdK) | 202 | 21% |
| CdK only | 121 | 12% |
| With other knowledge dimensions | 81 | 9% |
| Metacognitive knowledge (MK) | 568 | 58% |
| MK only | 0 | 0% |
| With other knowledge dimensions | 568 | 58% |
Percent refer to the overall use of knowledge dimensions (CcK, SK, and CdK equal 100%)
Fig. 2Time-line graph (Gantt-charts) of two participants of a session with a clinical case. The Gantt-chart shows the distribution of the use of different diagnostic knowledge categories over time. As metacognitive knowledge was only in use in combination with other knowledge categories its use is presented additively on top. The upper part of the figure shows a participant with only little use of the knowledge categories and the lower part of the figure a participant with much use of the knowledge categories
Pearson’s Correlations of the use of diagnostic knowledge dimensions
| Knowledge dimension | Strategic knowledge | Conditional knowledge | Metacognitive knowledge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conceptual knowledge | .23 | .00 | .35* |
| Strategic knowledge | .27* | .09 | |
| Conditional knowledge | .15 |
Significant results (p < .05) are marked with an asterisk
Pearson’s correlations knowledge dimensions and time-on-task
| Knowledge dimension | Correlation with time-on-task |
|---|---|
| Conceptual knowledge | .27* |
| Strategic knowledge | .35* |
| Conditional knowledge | .16 |
| Metacognitive knowledge | .24 |
Significant results (p < .05) are marked with an asterisk
Fig. 3Diagnostic knowledge dimensions used by medical students over the course of the cases