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The robustness of medical expertise:
Clinical case processing by medical
experts and subexperts
REMY M. J.
P. RIKERS, HENK G. SCHMIDT, HENNY P. A. BOSHUIZEN,
GERARD C. M. LINSSEN, GEERTJAN WESSELING, and FRED G. W. C. PAAS
Erasmus University Rotterdam
Medical specialists confronted with problems in their domain of expertise do
not rely on intentional causal reasoning, using explicit principles or rules. Rather,
reasoning is an automatic process, using knowledge in an encapsulated
mode. Less clear is what happens when medical specialists encounter problems
outside their specialties. To shed light on this issue, we asked cardiologists and
pulmonologists to evaluate 4 clinical cases, 2 in the domain of cardiology and
2 in pulmonology. Their task was to study, diagnose, recall, and explain the signs
and symptoms of the clinical case descriptions. The cardiologists and pulmonologists
alike processed cases in their specialties faster and more accurately,
but recall and pathophysiological explanations did not reveal significant differences.
These results suggest that medical specialists do not process cases
outside their specialties in a qualitatively different mode from cases within their
specialties.
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