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Reasoning under uncertainty.

Colin Aitken1, Dimitris Mavridis2,3

  • 1School of Mathematics, Maxwell Institute and Joseph Bell Centre for Forensic Statistics and Legal Reasoning, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.

Evidence-Based Mental Health
|January 26, 2019
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Probabilistic reasoning, essential for uncertain medical diagnoses, uses Bayes' theorem and likelihood ratios to update beliefs. Proper education is crucial to avoid common errors in interpreting these probabilities.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical decision-making
  • Probability theory
  • Biostatistics

Background:

  • Correct reasoning is challenging with uncertain information.
  • Probabilistic reasoning addresses uncertainty in decision-making.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explain probabilistic reasoning for medical diagnosis and prognosis.
  • To demonstrate updating probabilities with new evidence using Bayes' theorem.
  • To introduce the likelihood ratio for measuring evidence support.

Main Methods:

  • Applying conditional probabilities and Bayes' theorem.
  • Utilizing the likelihood ratio to quantify evidence for medical diagnoses/prognoses.
  • Comparing probabilities to assess information support.

Main Results:

  • The likelihood ratio provides a continuous measure of evidence, avoiding discrete significance classifications.
  • It coherently updates prior beliefs for diagnoses or prognoses.
  • Enables systematic integration of successive pieces of evidence.

Conclusions:

  • Probabilistic reasoning requires education; it is not an innate skill.
  • Common errors include the prosecutor's fallacy and misinterpreting relative risks.
  • Accurate interpretation of likelihood ratios necessitates considering prior odds.