Myles-Worsley M, Johnston W A, Simons M A
Department of Psychiatry, University of Utah Medical Center, Salt Lake City 84132.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 1988 Jul;14(3):553-7. doi: 10.1037//0278-7393.14.3.553.
Observers with four different levels of radiological experience performed a recognition memory task on slides of faces and chest X-ray films. Half of the X-ray films revealed clinically significant abnormalities and half did not. Recognition memory for faces was uniformly high across all levels of radiological experience. Memory for abnormal X-ray films increased with radiological experience and, for the most experienced radiologists, was equivalent to memory for faces. Surprisingly, recognition memory for normal films actually decreased with radiological experience from above chance to a chance level. These results indicate that radiological expertise is associated with selective processing of clinically relevant abnormalities in X-ray images. Expert radiologists appear to process X-ray images the way that we all process faces, by quickly detecting and devoting processing resources to features that distinguish one stimulus from another. However, the selective processing of X-ray films appears to be restricted to clinically relevant abnormalities. As they develop the ability to detect these abnormalities, radiologists appear to lose the ability to detect variations in normal features.
具有四种不同放射学经验水平的观察者对面部幻灯片和胸部X光片进行了识别记忆任务。一半的X光片显示出具有临床意义的异常,另一半则没有。在所有放射学经验水平中,对面部的识别记忆都一致很高。对异常X光片的记忆随着放射学经验的增加而提高,对于经验最丰富的放射科医生来说,对异常X光片的记忆与对面部的记忆相当。令人惊讶的是,对于正常X光片的识别记忆实际上随着放射学经验的增加而从高于随机水平降至随机水平。这些结果表明,放射学专业知识与对X光图像中临床相关异常的选择性处理有关。专家级放射科医生处理X光图像的方式似乎与我们处理面部的方式相同,即通过快速检测并将处理资源投入到区分一种刺激与另一种刺激的特征上。然而,对X光片的选择性处理似乎仅限于临床相关异常。随着放射科医生发展出检测这些异常的能力,他们似乎失去了检测正常特征变化的能力。