Detecting Fast, Online Reasoning Processes in Clinical Decision Making

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American Psychological Association

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Abstract

In an experiment that used the inconsistency paradigm, experienced clinical psychologists and psychology students performed a reading task using clinical reports and a diagnostic judgment task. The clinical reports provided information about the symptoms of hypothetical clients who had been previously diagnosed with a specific mental disorder. Reading times of inconsistent target sentences were slower than that of control sentences, demonstrating an inconsistency effect. The results also showed that experienced clinicians gave different weights to different symptoms according to their relevance when fluently reading the clinical reports provided, despite the fact that all the symptoms were of equal diagnostic value according to the DSM-IV. The diagnostic judgment task yielded a similar pattern of results. In contrast to previous findings, the results of the reading task may be taken as a direct evidence of the intervention of reasoning processes that occur very early, rapidly, and online. We suggest that these processes are based on the representation of mental disorders and that these representations are particularly suited to fast retrieval from memory and to making inferences. They may also be related to the clinician's causal reasoning. The implications of these results for clinician training are also discussed.

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This is the author’s version of the work, which has been accepted for publication in Psychological Assessment published by the American Psychological Association. It is not the final version of record. The final version is in https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fa0035151

Bibliographic citation

Flores, A., Cobos, P.L., López, F.J., & Godoy, A. (2014). Detecting fast, online reasoning processes in clinical decision making. Psychological Assessment, 26, 660-665.

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