Literature DB >> 7057428

'Pseudodiagnosticity' in an idealized medical problem-solving environment.

L Kern, M E Doherty.   

Abstract

Sixty-five senior medical students chose symptom information that would allow them to assess which of two diagnoses was more appropriate for hypothetical patients. Although Bayes' theorem should have governed their data selection, 83 percent of the subjects did not choose the symptom information required for Bayesian computation. Instead, they showed an overwhelming tendency to seek data relevant to a single disease, while ignoring information related to an equally plausible alternative diagnosis. The tendency for subjects to select diagnostically irrelevant information in such tasks has been labeled "pseudodiagnosticity." The effect result from the difficulty of simultaneously evaluating the relevance of a single symptoms in relation to single diagnosis. Medical educators might incorporate classroom demonstrations of the pseudodiagnosticity effect in order to increase students' accuracy in differential diagnosis.

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Year:  1982        PMID: 7057428     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-198202000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Educ        ISSN: 0022-2577


  6 in total

1.  On people's understanding of the diagnostic implications of probabilistic data.

Authors:  M E Doherty; R Chadwick; H Garavan; D Barr; C R Mynatt
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1996-09

2.  Serial attention within working memory.

Authors:  H Garavan
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1998-03

3.  Teaching medical students to estimate probability of coronary artery disease.

Authors:  D H Hickam; H C Sox
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1987 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  Automated detection of heuristics and biases among pathologists in a computer-based system.

Authors:  Rebecca S Crowley; Elizabeth Legowski; Olga Medvedeva; Kayse Reitmeyer; Eugene Tseytlin; Melissa Castine; Drazen Jukic; Claudia Mello-Thoms
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2012-05-23       Impact factor: 3.853

5.  From is to ought, and back: how normative concerns foster progress in reasoning research.

Authors:  Vincenzo Crupi; Vittorio Girotto
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-03-13

6.  The script concordance test: an adequate tool to assess clinical reasoning?

Authors:  Eugène J F M Custers
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2018-06
  6 in total

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