The invisible breast cancer : Experience does not protect against inattentional blindness to clinically relevant findings in radiology
Journal article
Williams, Lauren, Carrigan, Ann, Auffermann, William, Mills, Megan, Rich, Anina, Elmore, Joann and Drew, Trafton. (2021). The invisible breast cancer : Experience does not protect against inattentional blindness to clinically relevant findings in radiology. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review. 28(2), pp. 503-511. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-020-01826-4
Authors | Williams, Lauren, Carrigan, Ann, Auffermann, William, Mills, Megan, Rich, Anina, Elmore, Joann and Drew, Trafton |
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Abstract | Retrospectively obvious events are frequently missed when attention is engaged in another task—a phenomenon known as inattentional blindness. Although the task characteristics that predict inattentional blindness rates are relatively well understood, the observer characteristics that predict inattentional blindness rates are largely unknown. Previously, expert radiologists showed a surprising rate of inattentional blindness to a gorilla photoshopped into a CT scan during lung-cancer screening. However, inattentional blindness rates were higher for a group of naïve observers performing the same task, suggesting that perceptual expertise may provide protection against inattentional blindness. Here, we tested whether expertise in radiology predicts inattentional blindness rates for unexpected abnormalities that were clinically relevant. Fifty radiologists evaluated CT scans for lung cancer. The final case contained a large (9.1 cm) breast mass and lymphadenopathy. When their attention was focused on searching for lung nodules, 66% of radiologists did not detect breast cancer and 30% did not detect lymphadenopathy. In contrast, only 3% and 10% of radiologists (N = 30), respectively, missed these abnormalities in a follow-up study when searching for a broader range of abnormalities. Neither experience, primary task performance, nor search behavior predicted which radiologists missed the unexpected abnormalities. These findings suggest perceptual expertise does not protect against inattentional blindness, even for unexpected stimuli that are within the domain of expertise. |
Keywords | attention; visual perception; visual search; inattentional blindness |
Year | 01 Jan 2021 |
Journal | Psychonomic Bulletin and Review |
Journal citation | 28 (2), pp. 503-511 |
Publisher | Springer |
ISSN | 1069-9384 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-020-01826-4 |
Web address (URL) | https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13423-020-01826-4 |
Open access | Published as non-open access |
Research or scholarly | Research |
Page range | 503-511 |
Publisher's version | License All rights reserved File Access Level Controlled |
Output status | Published |
Publication dates | |
Online | 02 Nov 2020 |
Publication process dates | |
Accepted | 04 Oct 2020 |
Deposited | 03 Dec 2024 |
Additional information | © The Psychonomic Society, Inc. 2020 |
Place of publication | United States |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/911v2/the-invisible-breast-cancer-experience-does-not-protect-against-inattentional-blindness-to-clinically-relevant-findings-in-radiology
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