Physician decision making and cardiac risk: effects of knowledge, risk perception, risk tolerance, and fuzzy processing. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Despite training, professionals sometimes make serious errors in risky decision making. The authors investigated judgments and decisions for 9 hypothetical patients at 3 levels of cardiac risk, comparing student and physician groups varying in domain-specific knowledge. Decisions were examined regarding whether they deviated from guidelines, how risk perceptions and risk tolerances determined decisions, and how the latter differed for knowledge groups. More knowledgeable professionals were better at discriminating levels of risk according to external correspondence criteria but committed similar errors in disjunctive probability judgments, violating internal coherence criteria. Also, higher knowledge groups relied on fewer dimensions of information than did lower knowledge groups. Consistent with fuzzy-trace theory, experts achieved better discrimination by processing less information and made sharper all-or-none distinctions among decision categories.

publication date

  • September 1, 2006

Research

keywords

  • Cardiovascular Diseases
  • Clinical Competence
  • Cognition
  • Decision Making
  • Physicians
  • Psychology
  • Risk Assessment

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 33748760339

PubMed ID

  • 16953744

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 12

issue

  • 3