This study tested between two interpretations of confidence in diagnostic hypotheses: expected probability of being correct and conflict experienced during the diagnostic process. Physicians generated hypotheses for case histories with two plausible diagnoses, one having a higher population base rate but less severe clinical consequences than the other. Case information indicative of the two diagnoses was varied. Generation proportions for the two diagnoses and confidence judgments both deviated from the predictions of a Bayesian belief model, but in different ways. Generation of a hypothesis increased with diagnosis-consistent information and diagnosis base rates, but was not reduced by diagnosis-inconsistent information. Confidence was se...
Decision makers have been found to bias their interpretation of incoming information to support an e...
Human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics. A central question is whether the bias resu...
Some evidence suggests that clinicians' discomfort with diagnostic uncertainty can lead to communica...
This study tested between two interpretations of confidence in diagnostic hypotheses: expected proba...
Research in several domains has revealed that when individuals are asked to estimate the probability...
A considerable amount of medical errors are indicated to occur during the diagnostic process. Variou...
Confidence is the 'feeling of knowing' that accompanies decision-making. Bayesian theory proposes th...
An accumulating body of research on clinical judgment, decision making, and probability estimation h...
OBJECTIVE: This study explores the alignment between physicians’ confidence in their diagnoses and t...
This study explores the alignment between physicians' confidence in their diagnoses and the “correct...
This study explores the alignment between physicians' confidence in their diagnoses and the “correct...
The present study investigated findings discussed in a review by Vickers (1985) which suggest that t...
A prospective cohort study was done to assess the effects of value bias and the inappropriate use of...
Although recent work has encouraged doctors to express their uncertainty to patients as a means to i...
156 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1988.Two laboratory experiments we...
Decision makers have been found to bias their interpretation of incoming information to support an e...
Human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics. A central question is whether the bias resu...
Some evidence suggests that clinicians' discomfort with diagnostic uncertainty can lead to communica...
This study tested between two interpretations of confidence in diagnostic hypotheses: expected proba...
Research in several domains has revealed that when individuals are asked to estimate the probability...
A considerable amount of medical errors are indicated to occur during the diagnostic process. Variou...
Confidence is the 'feeling of knowing' that accompanies decision-making. Bayesian theory proposes th...
An accumulating body of research on clinical judgment, decision making, and probability estimation h...
OBJECTIVE: This study explores the alignment between physicians’ confidence in their diagnoses and t...
This study explores the alignment between physicians' confidence in their diagnoses and the “correct...
This study explores the alignment between physicians' confidence in their diagnoses and the “correct...
The present study investigated findings discussed in a review by Vickers (1985) which suggest that t...
A prospective cohort study was done to assess the effects of value bias and the inappropriate use of...
Although recent work has encouraged doctors to express their uncertainty to patients as a means to i...
156 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1988.Two laboratory experiments we...
Decision makers have been found to bias their interpretation of incoming information to support an e...
Human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics. A central question is whether the bias resu...
Some evidence suggests that clinicians' discomfort with diagnostic uncertainty can lead to communica...