Unlabelled: To test the predictions of fuzzy-trace theory regarding pediatric clinicians' decision-making processes and risk perceptions about antibiotics for children with acute otitis media (AOM). We conducted an online survey experiment administered to a sample of 260 pediatric clinicians. We measured their risk perceptions and prescribing decisions across 3 hypothetical AOM treatment scenarios. Participants were asked to choose among the following options: prescribe antibiotics immediately, watchful waiting ("hedging"), or not prescribing antibiotics. We identified 4 gists based on prior literature: 1) "why not take a risk?" 2) "antibiotics might not help but can hurt," 3) "antibiotics do not have harmful side effects," and 4) "antibiotics might have harmful side effects." All 4 gists predicted risky choice ( < 0.001), and gist endorsements varied significantly between scenarios when antibiotics were indicated, (2, 255) = 8.53, < 0.001; (2, 255) = 5.14, < .01; and (2, 255) = 3.56, < 0.05 for the first 3 factors, respectively. In a logistic regression, more experienced clinicians were less likely to hedge ( = -0.05; < 0.01). As predicted by fuzzy-trace theory, pediatric clinicians' prescription decisions are associated with gist representations, which are distinct from verbatim risk estimates. Antibiotic stewardship programs can benefit by communicating the appropriate gists to clinicians who prescribe antibiotics for pediatric patients.
Highlights: We found clinicians' antibiotic prescription decisions were driven by gist representations of antibiotic risks for a given hypothetical patient scenario, and clinicians' gist representations and verbatim risk estimates about antibiotic-related risks were distinct from each other.We showed that the effect of patient scenarios on clinicians' antibiotic prescription decisions was mediated by clinicians' gist representations.Less experienced clinicians tend to "hedge" in their antibiotic prescription decisions compared with more experienced clinicians.The broader impact of our study is that antibiotic stewardship programs can benefit by communicating the appropriate gists to clinicians who prescribe antibiotics for pediatric patients, rather than solely focusing on closing potential knowledge deficits of the clinicians.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23814683221115416 | DOI Listing |
J Neurosci
December 2024
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge, UK.
Implementing cognitive control relies on neural representations that are inherently high-dimensional and distributed across multiple subregions in the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Traditional approaches tackle prefrontal representation by reducing it into a unidimensional measure (univariate amplitude) or using them to distinguish a limited number of alternatives (pattern classification). By contrast, representational similarity analysis (RSA) enables flexibly formulating various hypotheses about informational contents underlying the neural codes, explicitly comparing hypotheses, and examining the representational alignment between brain regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
November 2024
Institute for Neural Computation Faculty of Computer Science, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum 44780, Germany.
The concept of episodic memory (EM) faces significant challenges by two claims: EM might not be a distinct memory system, and EM might be an epiphenomenon of a more general capacity for mental time travel (MTT). Nevertheless, the observations leading to these arguments do not preclude the existence of a mechanically and functionally distinct EM system. First, modular systems, like cognition, can have distinct subsystems that may not be distinguishable in the system's final output.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMem Cognit
August 2024
Centre de Recherche en Psychologie et Neurosciences, CNRS & AMU, Aix-Marseille Université, UMR7290, Bâtiment 9 Case D, 3, place Victor Hugo, 13331, Marseille, Cedex 3, France.
Aging causes changes in episodic memory. While the ability to remember the general idea or gist of past episodes is relatively preserved from the effects of aging, the ability to remember the verbatim details of these episodes declines. The aim of the present study was to examine whether age-related differences in the quality of episodic representations could be reduced by manipulations of information encoding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Aging
November 2024
Department of Psychology, Saarland University.
It is well-known that sentential context modulates sentence processing. But does context also have effects that extend beyond the immediate moment, for example, by impacting the memory representations that people store? And are there age-related differences in this process? Here, we investigated this question. German readers who varied in age self-paced through constraining sentences that continued in a predictable or less predictable fashion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Psychol Appl
December 2024
Department of Political Science, Ohio State University.
Fuzzy-trace theory (FTT) posits that people share misinformation online if it promotes gist mental representations, cuing motivationally relevant values. Most people value the truth. Thus, per FTT, people decide to share messages that they perceive as true.
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