Uncertain decisions regarding stroke symptoms: Changing bias through consequences

被引:0
|
作者
Jordan D. Bailey
Jonathan C. Baker
Adam K. Arabian
机构
[1] Exponent,
[2] Inc.,undefined
[3] Western Michigan University,undefined
[4] Orthocare Innovations,undefined
[5] LLC,undefined
关键词
Stroke; Signal detection; FAST; Decisions under uncertainty;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The impact of stroke on the lives of individuals and the health-care system is considerable. Damage from stroke can be limited if the treatment is administered at the appropriate time, so early recognition is essential. Some common interventions (e.g., FAST) designed to help potential stroke victims discriminate stroke symptoms often result in false negatives. Strokes can present with a wide variety of symptoms, making it difficult to discriminate stroke symptoms from non-stroke symptoms. Because the probability that a given set of symptoms are stroke symptoms is typically unknown to the victim, the problem is a decision under conditions of uncertainty. Signal detection methodology allows us to consider the ability of an individual or group to discriminate between stroke symptoms and non-stroke symptoms, as well as measure the motivation or bias toward a particular decision. We examined the effects of levels of feedback on performance of a random sample of participants from Amazon Mechanical Turk. We found that feedback designed to generate liberal bias toward stroke detection yielded fewer misses than FAST while maintaining a false alarm rate below 50%. Given that strokes are difficult to discriminate, this suggests that interventions should be focused on incentivizing help-seeking behaviors in conditions of uncertainty for those most at risk.
引用
收藏
页码:89 / 99
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Community Stroke Education: Addressing Stroke Symptoms Through Public Education
    Rossillo, Kim
    CRITICAL CARE NURSE, 2018, 38 (02) : E76 - E77
  • [22] The Changing Opinions of Australasian Health Professionals Regarding Early Mobilisation after Stroke
    Lynch, E.
    Cumming, T.
    Janssen, H.
    Bernhardt, J.
    CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2016, 42 : 5 - 5
  • [23] QEEG may uniquely inform and expedite decisions regarding reperfusion therapies in acute stroke
    Sheikh, N.
    Wong, A.
    Read, S.
    Coulthard, A.
    Finnigan, S.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE, 2013, 8 : 42 - 43
  • [24] Changing bodies, changing narratives and the consequences of tellability: a case study of becoming disabled through sport
    Smith, Brett
    Sparkes, Andrew C.
    SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, 2008, 30 (02) : 217 - 236
  • [25] An Exploration of Gender Bias, Framing, and Student Loan Decisions Through an Experimental Design
    Travis P. Mountain
    Namhoon Kim
    Michael S. Gutter
    Elizabeth Kiss
    Soo Hyun Cho
    Carrie L. Johnson
    Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 2020, 41 : 350 - 363
  • [26] Norm compliance affects perceptual decisions through modulation of a starting point bias
    Toelch, Ulf
    Panizzau, Folco
    Heekeren, Hauke R.
    ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 2018, 5 (03):
  • [27] An Exploration of Gender Bias, Framing, and Student Loan Decisions Through an Experimental Design
    Mountain, Travis P.
    Kim, Namhoon
    Gutter, Michael S.
    Kiss, Elizabeth
    Cho, Soo Hyun
    Johnson, Carrie L.
    JOURNAL OF FAMILY AND ECONOMIC ISSUES, 2020, 41 (02) : 350 - 363
  • [28] Informing clinician decisions regarding surgical interventions for severe stroke: patient and spousal/caregiver perspectives
    Green, T. L.
    Newcommon, N.
    Demchuk, A.
    STROKE, 2012, 43 (11) : E146 - E147
  • [29] Defining Minor Symptoms In Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Prognostic Evaluation To Support Therapeutic Decisions
    Strambo, D.
    Zambon, A.
    Giacalone, G.
    Di Maggio, G.
    Martinelli, V.
    Comi, G.
    Roveri, L.
    Sessa, M.
    CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2014, 37 : 473 - 474
  • [30] Patient interviews regarding their experiences of their journey through Northamptonshire Stroke Pathway
    Matthew, J.
    DiGregorio, T.
    Dennis, L.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE, 2019, 14 (4_SUPPL) : 54 - 54