|
|
|
|
|
by HillaryBriss
2694 days ago
|
|
yeah. the "base rate fallacy" example sheds some light on the pros/cons of mammogram results. one interesting thing about that section of the book is that it says medical doctors fall prey to the fallacy more often than not. i always kind of wonder when i see a medical doctor explaining statistics to a general audience: do they really have this right? |
|
For most mammographers, practicing medicine is not deliberate practice, according to Ericsson. It’s more like putting into a tin cup than working with a coach. That’s because mammographers usually only find out if they missed a tumor months or years later, if at all, at which point they’ve probably forgotten the details of the case and can no longer learn from their successes and mistakes.
One field of medicine in which this is definitively not the case is surgery. Unlike mammographers, surgeons tend to get better with time. What makes surgeons different from mammographers, according to Ericsson, is that the outcome of most surgeries is usually immediately apparent—the patient either gets better or doesn’t—which means that surgeons are constantly receiving feedback on their performance.