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Cognitive debiasing 1: origins of bias and theory of debiasing
by
Mamede, Sílvia
, Singhal, Geeta
, Croskerry, Pat
in
Abdomen
/ Anxiety
/ Behavior
/ Bias
/ Clinical Competence
/ Cognition
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive biases
/ Constipation
/ Decision Making
/ Diagnosis, Differential
/ Diagnostic errors
/ Diagnostic Errors - prevention & control
/ Diagnostic Errors - psychology
/ Emergency medical care
/ Heuristic
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Laxatives
/ Narrative Review
/ Patient safety
/ Pneumonia
/ Prejudice - psychology
/ Psychological Theory
/ Thinking
2013
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Cognitive debiasing 1: origins of bias and theory of debiasing
by
Mamede, Sílvia
, Singhal, Geeta
, Croskerry, Pat
in
Abdomen
/ Anxiety
/ Behavior
/ Bias
/ Clinical Competence
/ Cognition
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive biases
/ Constipation
/ Decision Making
/ Diagnosis, Differential
/ Diagnostic errors
/ Diagnostic Errors - prevention & control
/ Diagnostic Errors - psychology
/ Emergency medical care
/ Heuristic
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Laxatives
/ Narrative Review
/ Patient safety
/ Pneumonia
/ Prejudice - psychology
/ Psychological Theory
/ Thinking
2013
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Do you wish to request the book?
Cognitive debiasing 1: origins of bias and theory of debiasing
by
Mamede, Sílvia
, Singhal, Geeta
, Croskerry, Pat
in
Abdomen
/ Anxiety
/ Behavior
/ Bias
/ Clinical Competence
/ Cognition
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive biases
/ Constipation
/ Decision Making
/ Diagnosis, Differential
/ Diagnostic errors
/ Diagnostic Errors - prevention & control
/ Diagnostic Errors - psychology
/ Emergency medical care
/ Heuristic
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Laxatives
/ Narrative Review
/ Patient safety
/ Pneumonia
/ Prejudice - psychology
/ Psychological Theory
/ Thinking
2013
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Cognitive debiasing 1: origins of bias and theory of debiasing
Journal Article
Cognitive debiasing 1: origins of bias and theory of debiasing
2013
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Overview
Numerous studies have shown that diagnostic failure depends upon a variety of factors. Psychological factors are fundamental in influencing the cognitive performance of the decision maker. In this first of two papers, we discuss the basics of reasoning and the Dual Process Theory (DPT) of decision making. The general properties of the DPT model, as it applies to diagnostic reasoning, are reviewed. A variety of cognitive and affective biases are known to compromise the decision-making process. They mostly appear to originate in the fast intuitive processes of Type 1 that dominate (or drive) decision making. Type 1 processes work well most of the time but they may open the door for biases. Removing or at least mitigating these biases would appear to be an important goal. We will also review the origins of biases. The consensus is that there are two major sources: innate, hard-wired biases that developed in our evolutionary past, and acquired biases established in the course of development and within our working environments. Both are associated with abbreviated decision making in the form of heuristics. Other work suggests that ambient and contextual factors may create high risk situations that dispose decision makers to particular biases. Fatigue, sleep deprivation and cognitive overload appear to be important determinants. The theoretical basis of several approaches towards debiasing is then discussed. All share a common feature that involves a deliberate decoupling from Type 1 intuitive processing and moving to Type 2 analytical processing so that eventually unexamined intuitive judgments can be submitted to verification. This decoupling step appears to be the critical feature of cognitive and affective debiasing.
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd,BMJ Publishing Group LTD,BMJ Publishing Group
Subject
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