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The satisfaction-of-search (SOS) effect occurs when an abnormality on an image is missed because another is found. The aim of this experiment was to test whether severe distracting fractures control the magnitude of SOS on other fractures when both appear in a single CT image.The institutional review board approved this study. The experimental (SOS) condition included 35 cervical spine CT cases, all of which contained severe cervical spine injuries. For each of these cases, a similar case was found that had no injuries. Image modification software was developed to add simulated fractures to each pair of cases, with and without a major injury. Sixteen different minor fractures were added to 16 of the 35 pairs of images. The 35 cases without native injuries constituted a control (non-SOS) condition mixed in a random order. Twenty radiologists read 35 mixed cases in each of two sessions. False-positive evaluations were collected only for cases without simulated fractures.An SOS effect on the detection of simulated fractures was not observed. There was a nonsignificant (P = .07) finding of poorer detection in the presence of cases with severe injuries. However, the magnitude of the effect was no greater than has been observed for less severe distracting injuries.The outcome agrees with the results of two previous experiments that failed to yield an SOS effect associated with detecting severe injuries, suggesting that the severity of a distracting injury does not determine whether a second injury is discovered.

作者:Kevin M, Schartz;Mark T, Madsen;John, Kim;Riko, Ohashi;Kenjirou, Ohashi;George Y, El-Khoury;Robert T, Caldwell;Edmund A, Franken;Kevin S, Berbaum

来源:Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR 2016 年 13卷 8期

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作者:
Kevin M, Schartz;Mark T, Madsen;John, Kim;Riko, Ohashi;Kenjirou, Ohashi;George Y, El-Khoury;Robert T, Caldwell;Edmund A, Franken;Kevin S, Berbaum
来源:
Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR 2016 年 13卷 8期
标签:
Diagnostic radiology images interpretation observer performance quality assurance
The satisfaction-of-search (SOS) effect occurs when an abnormality on an image is missed because another is found. The aim of this experiment was to test whether severe distracting fractures control the magnitude of SOS on other fractures when both appear in a single CT image.The institutional review board approved this study. The experimental (SOS) condition included 35 cervical spine CT cases, all of which contained severe cervical spine injuries. For each of these cases, a similar case was found that had no injuries. Image modification software was developed to add simulated fractures to each pair of cases, with and without a major injury. Sixteen different minor fractures were added to 16 of the 35 pairs of images. The 35 cases without native injuries constituted a control (non-SOS) condition mixed in a random order. Twenty radiologists read 35 mixed cases in each of two sessions. False-positive evaluations were collected only for cases without simulated fractures.An SOS effect on the detection of simulated fractures was not observed. There was a nonsignificant (P = .07) finding of poorer detection in the presence of cases with severe injuries. However, the magnitude of the effect was no greater than has been observed for less severe distracting injuries.The outcome agrees with the results of two previous experiments that failed to yield an SOS effect associated with detecting severe injuries, suggesting that the severity of a distracting injury does not determine whether a second injury is discovered.