The development of new functional features by instruction: The case of medical education

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (1):20-21 (1998)
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Abstract

Medical education provides many examples of the development of functional features, but as a response to deliberate instruction. These features require so much specificity and context sensitivity that they seem likely to require the development of new categories of appearances rather than just reweighting old features. A suggested implication is that feature development may help to explain the problematic noticing of features in diagnosis.

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