Authors
Deb Feldman-Stewart, Nancy Kocovski, Beth A McConnell, Michael D Brundage, William J Mackillop
Publication date
2000/4
Journal
Medical Decision Making
Volume
20
Issue
2
Pages
228-238
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
The study was designed to determine which formats for displaying quantities, such as probabilities of treatment risks and benefits, are perceived most accurately and easily by patients. Accuracy and speed of processing were compared for six different presentation formats: pie charts, vertical bars, horizontal bars, numbers, systematic ovals, and random ovals. Quantities were used in two tasks: a choice task that required larger/smaller judgments and an estimate task that required more precise evaluation. The impacts of blue-yellow color and of a treatment-decision context on performance in the two tasks were also investigated. The study included four experiments. Taken together the results suggest that the formats best for making a choice differ from those best for estimating the size of an amount. For making a choice, vertical bars, horizontal bars, numbers, and systematic ovals were equally well perceived; pie …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Feldman-Stewart, N Kocovski, BA McConnell… - Medical Decision Making, 2000