Mathematics and Examples for Avoiding Common Probability Fallacies in Medical Disciplines | Chapter 11 | Current Trends in Medicine and Medical Research Vol. 1
This
chapter presents and explores many ‘fallacies’ about probability encountered in
medical fields. These include the Arithmetic Fallacies, the Inverse Fallacy,
the Favorable-Event Fallacy, the Conditional-Marginal Fallacy, Simpson’s
Paradox, the Conjunction Fallacy, the Appeal-to-Probability Fallacy, the
Base-Rate Neglect, and the Representative-Sampling Fallacy. We allude to simple
mathematical and visual representations as well as to demonstrative
calculations to understand these fallacies, their detrimental effects, and
their possible remedies. We pay a special attention to the computation of the
posterior probability of disease given a positive test. Besides exposing
fallacies that jeopardize such a computation, we offer an approximate method to
achieve this computation under justified typical assumptions, and we present an
exact method for it via the normalized two-by-two contingency matrix. Our
tutorial exposition herein should hopefully be of significant help to our
intended audience in the medical community, including medical students and
medical practitioners alike. It might ensure that they acquire the necessary
knowledge of elementary probability, but it does not demand that they gain too
much knowledge that might distract them from their genuine (vital and critical)
subject matter. It also attempts to remedy the notorious and grave ramifications
of probabilistic fallacies residing as permanent misconceptions in their
“private” knowledge databases. As an offshoot, the pedagogical nature of the
chapter could also be of benefit to probability educators who deliberately want
to engage their students in the learning process, i.e., to guide them to be
active learners. There are many reasons why 'active learning' is beneficial.
However, we believe that the single most important reason why it is so is the
fact that it is the most effective method for unraveling misconceptions and
eradicating fallacies.
Biography of author(s)
Rufaidah Ali Muhammad
Rushdi
Department
of Pediatrics, Kasr Al-Ainy Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, Cairo,
11562, Arab Republic of Egypt.
Ali Muhammad Ali Rushdi
Department
of Electrical and Computer Engineering, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah
21589, Saudi Arabia.
View Volume: https://doi.org/10.9734/BPI/ctmmr/v1
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