A half-second glimpse often lets radiologists identify breast cancer cases even when viewing the mammogram of the opposite breast

  • Evans, KK
  • Haygood, TM
  • Cooper, J
  • Culpan, A-M
  • Wolfe, JM
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Publication date
September 2016
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
ISSN
0027-8424
Citation count (estimate)
6

Abstract

Humans are very adept at extracting the “gist” of a scene in a fraction of a second. We have found that radiologists can discriminate normal from abnormal mammograms at above-chance levels after a half-second viewing (d′ ∼ 1) but are at chance in localizing the abnormality. This pattern of results suggests that they are detecting a global signal of abnormality. What are the stimulus properties that might support this ability? We investigated the nature of the gist signal in four experiments by asking radiologists to make detection and localization responses about briefly presented mammograms in which the spatial frequency, symmetry, and/or size of the images was manipulated. We show that the signal is stronger in the higher spatial frequenc...

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