NOVICE DIAGNOSTIC REASONING IN MEDICINE - ACCOUNTING FOR EVIDENCE

Citation
Jf. Arocha et Vl. Patel, NOVICE DIAGNOSTIC REASONING IN MEDICINE - ACCOUNTING FOR EVIDENCE, The Journal of the learning sciences, 4(4), 1995, pp. 355-384
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Education & Educational Research","Psychology, Educational
ISSN journal
10508406
Volume
4
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
355 - 384
Database
ISI
SICI code
1050-8406(1995)4:4<355:NDRIM->2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
This study investigated the strategies used by beginning, intermediate , and advanced medical students when solving clinical cases containing inconsistent data. Written clinical cases were used in which the init ial patient data suggested a very common and prototypical disease. Sub sequent data in the cases were inconsistent with this first suggestion . The cases were presented on a computer so that the subjects had the opportunity to reason aloud about the evidence. Verbal protocols were collected and analyzed. Our results showed that the beginning students generated the suggested hypothesis and either ignored or reinterprete d the inconsistent evidence to fit their initial hypotheses. Advanced novices generated several hypotheses with a similar underlying problem ; this allowed them to narrow their initial hypothesis set in the face of inconsistent evidence and make fewer data reinterpretations. Inter mediate novices showed a similar pattern but failed to change their hy potheses with inconsistent data. They maintained several hypotheses of a diverse nature concurrently, without evaluating them efficiently. T hey showed a deterioration in performance-commonly known as the interm ediate effect-which we interpreted as the result of a process of knowl edge reorganization that interferes with problem solving. Results are discussed in terms of change in reasoning strategies as a function of the type of learning in medical school.