100% tevredenheidsgarantie Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Lees online óf als PDF Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
College aantekeningen

Clinical Decision Making RU

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
2
Pagina's
9
Geüpload op
08-04-2023
Geschreven in
2022/2023

Notes of Clinical Decision Making classes. Period 3. 2023. SOW-PWB3020. Includes exercises useful for the exam!










Oeps! We kunnen je document nu niet laden. Probeer het nog eens of neem contact op met support.

Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
8 april 2023
Aantal pagina's
9
Geschreven in
2022/2023
Type
College aantekeningen
Docent(en)
Eliana and leontien
Bevat
Alle colleges

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Course Book: Judgment and Decision Making by Nancy S. Kim

Ch 1.
Decision making: why study it?
Judging and deciding:
- impacts our lives and our deaths.
And how about Clinical Desicion Making?
Judging and deciding:
- is part of the core business of a clinician.
- is generally rather difficult, because decision problems can be complex
and decision processes are complicated.
- can have far-reaching consequences.
Heuristics and Biases:
- “bounded rationality” (to decide under uncertainty, not selecting and weighing all
relevant information).
- heuristics: short-cut strategies that give reasonable solutions but may come with
systematic errors or biases. they evolve in contexts and are based on learning in
environments.
- study of heuristics & biases
- tversky & kahneman
- availability heuristic
- ideas/ elements that immediately come to mind when
evaluating a topic
- representativeness heuristic
- we estimate the probability of an event based on how similar it
is to another situation. we compare it to smt else that we
already have in mind.
- affect heuristic (new one suggested)
- based on the emotions present.
- anchoring and adjustment heuristic
- malleable every time new information is presented.
- NO LONGER A HEURISTIC BECAUSE: it does not
influence judgment when people try to answer a hard question
by instead answering an easier one. This no-longer-heuristic
involves no attribute substitution.
- fast and frugal heuristics
- learning how cognition works
- gigerezner - aims to show how heuristics are adaptive
- environmental cues - are retrieved from memory and serve as a
basis for intelligent guesses
- descriptive viewpoint: empirical research, cognitive psychology
- descriptive models: what people actually do, how they proceed

, - normative viewpoint: ideals or standards that if followed infallibly lead to the best
decisions
- normative models: objective criteria for judging an answer
- prescriptive viewpoint: rules or procedures to bridge actual and ideal decision
making
- prescriptive models: tell you how you should proceed


Ch 2 & 3 + Witterman, C. L.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/09515070.2012.655419
Availability and Representatives
- with frequency and probability people often use availability heuristic
- judgment of category membership based on resemblance to a prototype or stereotype:
- how representative is the to-be-judged person/object of the category
- how likely is it that this person/object belongs to that category
Prototypes
- is a specific type of example - a representative of a category
- prototypes depend on personal experiences and are subjective
Anchoring and adjustment
- Kahneman & Tversky
- people “anchor” to their initial choice/idea and these affect quantitive
judgments
- then they adjust away from that, but those adjustments are usually insufficient
- happens in frequency, value and magnitude judgments as well as casual
attributions
- insufficient adjustment: are made away from the anchor but anchor is
still weighted
- selective accessibility account: anchor and anchor-like examples are
more accessible than other information
- why are adjustments insufficient?
- adjustments require cognitive resources and there may
be competing demands for these
- individual differences in disposition for effortful
thinking
Ch 4 & 12 + Munro
http://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/child-abuse-and-neglect/vol/23/issue/8
Hindsight bias:
Being wise after the event.
- Uncertain outcomes often seem more likely after it is known that the outcome
occurred. (fictitious data)
- In hindsight, people believe to have estimated probabilities better than they did/would
have.
€4,99
Krijg toegang tot het volledige document:

100% tevredenheidsgarantie
Direct beschikbaar na je betaling
Lees online óf als PDF
Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten

Maak kennis met de verkoper
Seller avatar
susannevvv36145

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
susannevvv36145 RADBOUD U
Bekijk profiel
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
3
Lid sinds
2 jaar
Aantal volgers
3
Documenten
16
Laatst verkocht
2 jaar geleden

0,0

0 beoordelingen

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Veelgestelde vragen