Two sets of doctors (first-year residents and attending physicians) were compared based on their resulting outcomes for a set of radiological images using experimental design. If the attending physicians were the control group, what were the first-year residents?

🎲 Try a Random Question  |  Total Questions in Quiz: 5  |  🧠 Study this quiz with Flashcards
This question is part of a full practice quiz:
MCAT Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior: Passage 17 — practice the complete quiz, review flashcards, or try a random question.

Use the following passage to answer questions: A doctor is examining a CT scan, looking for evidence of a tumor. Either there is a tumor (signal present) or there is not (signal absent). Either the doctor sees a tumor (she responds 'yes') or does not (she responds 'no'). There are four possible outcomes: hit (tumor present and doctor says 'yes'), miss (tumor present and doctor says 'no'), false alarm (tumor absent and doctor says 'yes'), or correct rejection (tumor absent and doctor says 'no'). Hits and correct rejections are good. False alarms and misses are bad. Detecting a tumor is... Show more

Two sets of doctors (first-year residents and attending physicians) were compared based on their resulting outcomes for a set of radiological images using experimental design. If the attending physicians were the control group, what were the first-year residents?