User evaluation of the relevance of documents retrieved by an information system can be a useful measure of the performance of the system. The meaningfulness of this measure is, in part, determined by the extent to which it is influenced by external factors. This article examines the question of whe
Order of Information Affects Clinical Judgment
โ Scribed by GRETCHEN B. CHAPMAN; GEORGE R. BERGUS; ARTHUR S. ELSTEIN
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 843 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-3257
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Family practice physicians read a case vignette describing a patient with a history of lung cancer, a new transient neurological disturbance, and a normal computerized tomographic (CT) scan of the head. They then estimated the probabilities of two diagnoses: transient ischemic attack (TIA) and brain tumor. Probability estimates of TIA were lower if the history of lung cancer was presented at the end of the case rather than at the beginning. This recency effect was found for both more and less experienced physicians and whether subjects were prompted for a single end-of-sequence probability judgment or multiple step-by-step judgments after each piece of information. These results are inconsistent with Hogarth and Einhorn's (1992) belief-adjustment model, which predicts a recency effect for the step-by-step condition but a primacy effect for the end-of-sequence condition.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Clinicians (N = 308) responded to identical counseling vignettes of a male client that differed only in the client's stated birth order. Clinicians developed different impressions about the client and his family experiences that corresponded with the prototypical descriptions of persons from 1 of 4