Hip fracture or not? The reversed prevalence effect among non-experts’ diagnosis

被引:0
|
作者
Hanshu Zhang
Shen-Wu Hung
Yu-Pin Chen
Jan-Wen Ku
Philip Tseng
Yueh-Hsun Lu
Cheng-Ta Yang
机构
[1] Central China Normal University,School of Psychology
[2] Taipei Medical University,Department of Orthopedics, Wan Fang Hospital
[3] Taipei Medical University,Department of Orthopedics, School of Medicine, College of Medicine
[4] Shuang-Ho Hospital,Department of Radiology
[5] Taipei Medical University,Graduate Institute of Mind, Brain, and Consciousness
[6] Taipei Medical University,Department of Radiology, School of Medicine, College of Medicine
[7] Taipei Medical University,Department of Psychology
[8] National Chung-Kung University,undefined
关键词
Prevalence effect; Medical image perception; Hip fracture diagnosis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite numerous investigations of the prevalence effect on medical image perception, little research has been done to examine the effect of expertise, and its possible interaction with prevalence. In this study, medical practitioners were instructed to detect the presence of hip fracture in 50 X-ray images with either high prevalence (Nsignal = 40) or low prevalence (Nsignal = 10). Results showed that compared to novices (e.g., pediatricians, dentists, neurologists), the manipulation of prevalence shifted participant’s criteria in a different direction for experts who perform hip fracture diagnosis on a daily basis. That is, when prevalence rate is low (pfracture-present = 0.2), experts held more conservative criteria in answering “fracture-present,” whereas novices were more likely to believe there was fracture. Importantly, participants’ detection discriminability did not vary by the prevalence condition. In addition, all participants were more conservative with “fracture-present” responses when task difficulty increased. We suspect the apparent opposite criteria shift between experts and novices may have come from medical training that made novices to believe that a miss would result in larger cost compared to false positive, or because they failed to update their prior belief about the signal prevalence in the task, both would suggest that novices and experts may have different beliefs in placing the optimal strategy in the hip fracture diagnosis. Our work can contribute to medical education training as well as other applied clinical diagnosis that aims to mitigate the prevalence effect.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] INCREASED RISK FOR HIP FRACTURE AMONG SPOUSES - EFFECT OF HOMOGAMY?
    Sundh, V.
    Johansson, B.
    Oden, A.
    Karlsson, M.
    Rosengren, B.
    Kanis, J.
    Lorentzon, M.
    Mellstrom, D.
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2013, 53 : 86 - 86
  • [32] Increased Risk of Hip Fracture Among Spouses. Effect of Homogamy?
    Mellstrom, Dan
    Sundh, Valter
    Vala, Cecilie Hongslo
    Karlsson, Magnus
    Rosengren, Bjorn
    Ohlsson, Claes
    Lorentzon, Mattias
    Kanis, John
    Johansson, Boo
    Oden, Anders
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2013, 28
  • [33] Increased risk of hip fracture among spouses—evidence of a homogamy effect
    C. H. Vala
    A. Odén
    M. Lorentzon
    V. Sundh
    H. Johansson
    M. Karlsson
    B. Rosengren
    C. Ohlsson
    B. Johansson
    J. Kanis
    D. Mellström
    Osteoporosis International, 2017, 28 : 95 - 102
  • [34] EFFECT OF DEPRESSION ON FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AMONG OLDER ADULTS WITH HIP FRACTURE
    Inamdar, S.
    Young, Y.
    Lessner, L.
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2008, 48 : 474 - 475
  • [35] Prevalence and risk factors for atypical femoral fracture among Lebanese patients with hip and shaft fractures
    Khalil, Abir Bou
    Yammine, Ryan
    Rameh, Vanessa
    Zadeh, Catherina
    Saad, Randa
    Mallah, Hasan
    Khoury, Nabil J.
    Fuleihan, Ghada El-Hajj
    JBMR PLUS, 2024, 8 (08)
  • [36] Clinical outcomes and learning curve of Tip-in endoscopic mucosal resection for 15-25 mm colorectal neoplasms among non-experts
    Shigeta, Kohei
    Kishida, Yoshihiro
    Hotta, Kinichi
    Imai, Kenichiro
    Ito, Sayo
    Takada, Kazunori
    Sato, Junya
    Minamide, Tatsunori
    Yamamoto, Yoichi
    Yoshida, Masao
    Maeda, Yuki
    Kawata, Noboru
    Ishiwatari, Hirotoshi
    Matsubayashi, Hiroyuki
    Ono, Hiroyuki
    JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2024, 39 (08) : 1571 - 1579
  • [37] COST OF SECOND FRACTURE AMONG MEDICARE PATIENTS WITH INITIAL HIP, VERTEBRAL, AND NON-HIP NON-VERTEBRAL (NHNV) FRACTURES
    Song, X.
    Shi, N.
    Badamgarav, E.
    Kallich, J.
    Varker, H.
    Lenhart, G.
    Curtis, J. R.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2010, 13 (03) : A124 - A124
  • [38] Increased risk of hip fracture among spouses-evidence of a homogamy effect
    Vala, C. H.
    Oden, A.
    Lorentzon, M.
    Sundh, V.
    Johansson, H.
    Karlsson, M.
    Rosengren, B.
    Ohlsson, C.
    Johansson, B.
    Kanis, J.
    Mellstrom, D.
    OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL, 2017, 28 (01) : 95 - 102
  • [39] Searching for the 'winner' hip fracture patient: the effect of modifiable and non-modifiable factors on clinical outcomes following hip fracture surgery
    Makridis, Konstantinos G.
    Badras, Leonidas S.
    Badras, Stelios L.
    Karachalios, Theofilos S.
    HIP INTERNATIONAL, 2021, 31 (01) : 115 - 124
  • [40] High prevalence of uncorrected non-skeletal risk factors for hip fracture in nursing homes.
    Geusens, P
    Vanhoof, J
    Declerck, K
    Vaes, G
    Thoné, L
    Viaene, M
    Wertelaers, A
    Boonen, A
    Schoon, E
    Sileghem, A
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 1999, 14 : S509 - S509