Beigel A, Berren M R, Harding T W
Am J Psychiatry. 1984 Mar;141(3):373-7. doi: 10.1176/ajp.141.3.373.
Forty psychiatrists in Arizona were asked to rate the dangerousness to self or others of 16 patients described in case histories and to recommend an appropriate course of action. Half the psychiatrists were given the state defining dangerousness to use in responding. Psychiatrists who used the statute summary were less consistent in their predictions of dangerousness than were those who did not use it, especially when the patient had a history of violence. The concept of cognitive dissonance is used to partially explain this paradoxical finding.
亚利桑那州的40位精神科医生被要求对病历中描述的16名患者对自身或他人的危险性进行评级,并推荐适当的行动方案。一半的精神科医生被给予该州对危险性的定义以用于回应。使用法规摘要的精神科医生在对危险性的预测上不如未使用的医生一致,尤其是当患者有暴力史时。认知失调的概念被用来部分解释这一矛盾的发现。