0000000000398483

AUTHOR

Fred W. Mast

showing 2 related works from this author

For the mind's eye the world is two-dimensional.

2010

The nature of visual mental images is a topic that has puzzled neuroscientists, psychologists, and philosophers alike. On the one hand, mental images might preserve the 3-D properties of our perceptual world. On the other hand, they might be akin to 2-D pictures, such as photographs, paintings, or drawings. In the present study, 16 observers judged where real objects (Experiment 1) or photographs thereof (Experiment 2) were pointing. Both experiments contained a perception condition and an imagery condition. In Experiment 1, there was a significant difference between the pointing errors in the perception and the imagery conditions, whereas there was no such difference in Experiment 2. In im…

AdultMaleRotationmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychologyMental rotation03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineCognitionArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonPainting05 social sciencesSignificant differenceCognitionObserver (special relativity)ImaginationVisual PerceptionFemalePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMental imageCognitive psychologyPsychonomic bulletinreview
researchProduct

Do we truly see what we think we see? The role of cognitive bias in pathological interpretation

2008

In the histomorphological grading of prostate carcinoma, pathologists have regularly assigned comparable scores for the architectural Gleason and the now-obsolete nuclear World Health Organization (WHO) grading systems. Although both systems demonstrate good correspondence between grade and survival, they are based on fundamentally different biological criteria. We tested the hypothesis that this apparent concurrence between the two grading systems originates from an interpretation bias in the minds of diagnostic pathologists, rather than reflecting a biological reality. Three pathologists graded 178 prostatectomy specimens, assigning Gleason and WHO scores on glass slides and on digital im…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologymedicine.medical_treatmentAdenocarcinomaPathology and Forensic MedicineCognitionImage Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineHumansDiagnostic ErrorsGrading (education)PathologicalAgedProportional Hazards ModelsCell NucleusProstatectomyPathology Clinicalbusiness.industryProstatectomyProstateProstatic NeoplasmsAnatomical pathologyCognitionProstate carcinomaMiddle AgedPrognosisCognitive biasTumor recurrenceROC CurveClinical CompetenceRadiologybusinessPrejudiceThe Journal of Pathology
researchProduct