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Speed kills? Speed, accuracy, encapsulations and causal understanding.

机译:速度杀人?速度,准确性,封装和因果关系理解。

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BACKGROUND: The role of basic science, which provides causal explanations for clinical phenomena in medical education, is poorly understood. Schmidt has postulated that expert clinicians maintain this knowledge in 'encapsulated' form, indexed by words or phrases describing the processes. In the present paper we show that students who learn causal explanations have a more coherent understanding of the relation between diseases and clinical features which, in turn, influences recognition of words or phrases describing 'encapsulated knowledge' and the ability to maintain performance under speeded conditions. HYPOTHESES: In comparison to students who simply learn the features of 4 diagnostic categories, students who learn a causal explanation will: (a) recognise words describing encapsulated knowledge more accurately and (b) maintain or improve diagnostic performance under speeded conditions. METHODS: Two studies were conducted involving 4 'pseudo-endocrinology' diseases and undergraduate psychology students. One group learned signs and symptoms alone; the second group also learned a causal explanation. In study 1, they were then given a recognition memory task. In study 2, they were asked to diagnose new cases either (i) as quickly as possible or (ii) taking their time. RESULTS: In study 1, while there was no difference in recognising old words (90% versus 91%), the causal group was better able to recognise encapsulated and novel consistent words (50% versus 41%) (P = 0.02). In study 2 there was an interaction; causal students performed better under speeded conditions (71% versus 66%) but worse under thoroughness conditions (67% versus 73%), as predicted. CONCLUSIONS: Causal understanding leads to more coherent understanding of clinical conditions, which in turn leads to expert-like behaviour.
机译:背景:人们对基础科学的作用了解甚少,而基础科学为医学教育中的临床现象提供了因果关系。施密特(Schmidt)假设专家临床医生以“封装”形式维护此知识,并以描述过程的单词或短语为索引。在本文中,我们表明,学习因果解释的学生对疾病与临​​床特征之间的关系有更连贯的理解,进而影响描述“封装知识”的单词或短语的识别以及在快速条件下保持表现的能力。假设:与仅学习4种诊断类别特征的学生相比,学习因果解释的学生将:(a)更加准确地描述描述封装知识的单词,以及(b)在加速条件下保持或改善诊断性能。方法:进行了两项研究,涉及4种“伪内分泌”疾病和心理学专业的学生。一组人仅学习体征和症状。第二组也了解了因果关系。在研究1中,他们被赋予了识别记忆任务。在研究2中,要求他们要么(i)尽快诊断出新病例,要么(ii)花费时间。结果:在研究1中,虽然对旧单词的识别没有差异(分别为90%和91%),但因果组能够更好地识别封装的和新颖的一致单词(50%对41%)(P = 0.02)。在研究2中,存在相互作用。正如预期的那样,因果关系学生在加速条件下表现更好(71%对66%),但在彻底条件下表现较差(67%对73%)。结论:因果关系的理解导致对临床状况更加一致的理解,进而导致类似专家的行为。

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