Witteman Holly O, Zikmund-Fisher Brian J, Waters Erika A, Gavaruzzi Teresa, Fagerlin Angela
Program in Health Communication and Decision Making, Center for Bioethics and Social Sciences in Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2011 Sep 7;13(3):e54. doi: 10.2196/jmir.1656.
Online risk calculators offer different levels of precision in their risk estimates. People interpret numbers in varying ways depending on how they are presented, and we do not know how the number of decimal places displayed might influence perceptions of risk estimates.
The objective of our study was to determine whether precision (ie, number of decimals) in risk estimates offered by an online risk calculator influences users' ratings of (1) how believable the estimate is, (2) risk magnitude (ie, how large or small the risk feels to them), and (3) how well they can recall the risk estimate after a brief delay.
We developed two mock risk calculator websites that offered hypothetical percentage estimates of participants' lifetime risk of kidney cancer. Participants were randomly assigned to a condition where the risk estimate value rose with increasing precision (2, 2.1, 2.13, 2.133) or the risk estimate value fell with increasing precision (2, 1.9, 1.87, 1.867). Within each group, participants were randomly assigned one of the four numbers as their first risk estimate, and later received one of the remaining three as a comparison.
Participants who completed the experiment (N = 3422) were a demographically diverse online sample, approximately representative of the US adult population on age, gender, and race. Participants whose risk estimates had no decimal places gave the highest ratings of believability (F(3,3384) = 2.94, P = .03) and the lowest ratings of risk magnitude (F(3,3384) = 4.70, P = .003). Compared to estimates with decimal places, integer estimates were judged as highly believable by 7%-10% more participants (χ(2) (3) =17.8, P < .001). When comparing two risk estimates with different levels of precision, large majorities of participants reported that the numbers seemed equivalent across all measures. Both exact and approximate recall were highest for estimates with zero decimals. Odds ratios (OR) for correct approximate recall (defined as being within 50% of the original estimate) were, for one decimal place, OR = 0.65 (95% CI 0.49-0.86), for two decimal places, OR = 0.70 (95% CI 0.53-0.94), and for three decimal places, 0.61 (95% CI 0.45-0.81). Exact recall showed a similar pattern, with larger effects.
There are subtle but measurable differences in how people interpret risk estimates of varying precision. Adding decimal places in risk calculators offers little to no benefit and some cost. Rounding to the nearest integer is likely preferable for communicating risk estimates via risk calculators so that they might be remembered correctly and judged as believable.
在线风险计算器在风险估计方面提供了不同程度的精确性。人们对数字的解读方式因呈现方式而异,我们并不清楚所显示的小数位数会如何影响对风险估计的认知。
我们研究的目的是确定在线风险计算器提供的风险估计中的精确性(即小数位数)是否会影响用户对以下方面的评分:(1)估计的可信度;(2)风险大小(即他们感觉风险有多大或多小);(3)短暂延迟后他们对风险估计的记忆程度。
我们开发了两个模拟风险计算器网站,提供参与者患肾癌终身风险的假设百分比估计。参与者被随机分配到一种情况,即风险估计值随着精确性的提高而上升(2、2.1、2.13、2.133),或者风险估计值随着精确性的提高而下降(2、1.9、1.87、1.867)。在每个组内,参与者被随机分配四个数字中的一个作为他们的第一个风险估计,随后收到其余三个数字中的一个作为比较。
完成实验的参与者(N = 3422)是一个在人口统计学上具有多样性的在线样本,在年龄、性别和种族方面大致代表美国成年人口。风险估计没有小数位的参与者给出了最高的可信度评分(F(3,3384) = 2.94,P = .03)和最低的风险大小评分(F(3,3384) = 4.70,P = .003)。与有小数位的估计相比,整数估计被多7%-10%的参与者判定为高度可信(χ(2)(3) = 17.8,P < .001)。当比较两个不同精确程度的风险估计时,绝大多数参与者报告说在所有衡量标准下这些数字看起来是相等的。对于小数位为零的估计,精确和近似记忆都是最高的。正确近似记忆(定义为在原始估计的50%范围内)的优势比(OR),对于一位小数,OR = 0.65(95%CI 0.49 - 0.86),对于两位小数,OR = 0.70(9%CI 0.53 - 0.94),对于三位小数,0.61(95%CI 0.45 - 0.81)。精确记忆呈现出类似的模式,且影响更大。
人们对不同精确程度的风险估计的解读存在细微但可测量的差异。在风险计算器中增加小数位几乎没有益处甚至有一些成本。通过风险计算器传达风险估计时,四舍五入到最接近的整数可能更可取,这样它们可能会被正确记住并被判定为可信。