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A Quantitative Analysis of Patient P...
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Sataloff, Johnathan Brandon.
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A Quantitative Analysis of Patient Pronoun Use in Medical Narratives.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
A Quantitative Analysis of Patient Pronoun Use in Medical Narratives./
作者:
Sataloff, Johnathan Brandon.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2020,
面頁冊數:
20 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-06, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International82-06B.
標題:
Language. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28266800
ISBN:
9798691225888
A Quantitative Analysis of Patient Pronoun Use in Medical Narratives.
Sataloff, Johnathan Brandon.
A Quantitative Analysis of Patient Pronoun Use in Medical Narratives.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2020 - 20 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-06, Section: B.
Thesis (M.D.)--Harvard University, 2020.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Analysis of patient language within illness narratives has been helpful to understand how patients view their illnesses and differences in how patients and doctors understand specific illness processes. While substantial work has been done in this area, particularly in the area of metaphor analysis, less research has analyzed disease referents and how they change over the course of an unstructured patient narrative in order to investigate how a patient's relationship to their illness changes depending on context. We collected and transcribed interviews from a small cohort of six individuals with histories of an illness process not restricted to a single disease category. Through discussion between two readers, we identified and categorized all medical disease referents and associated words (possessives and demonstratives) in the interview transcripts into medical disease referents and medical abbreviations, pronouns and other and into different contexts from within the narrative (pre- vs. post diagnosis, medical vs. non-medical, moments of metaperspective-taking and moments of empowering self-dialogue), after which we performed goodness of fit statistics to determine which categories and associated words occurred more frequently in which contexts. We found that compared to all other disease referents, medical disease referents and medical abbreviations were significantly more likely to occur in medical contexts and were significantly less likely to be attached to the words "this" or "these," words defined as "indicating a thing or person present or near (actually in space or time, or ideally in thought)" according to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Conversely, it was found that contexts involving moments of meta-perspective- taking on illness as well as moments of empowering self-dialogue had significantly more use of "this" or "these" acting as a disease referent on its own and attached to disease referents than in other contexts. Overall, the results point to restriction of medical terms for illness within medical contexts and decreased use of words indicating closeness to the speaker for medical terms. Implications of this early study include a novel framework for future analysis of unstructured patient narratives.
ISBN: 9798691225888Subjects--Topical Terms:
643551
Language.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Narrative
A Quantitative Analysis of Patient Pronoun Use in Medical Narratives.
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Analysis of patient language within illness narratives has been helpful to understand how patients view their illnesses and differences in how patients and doctors understand specific illness processes. While substantial work has been done in this area, particularly in the area of metaphor analysis, less research has analyzed disease referents and how they change over the course of an unstructured patient narrative in order to investigate how a patient's relationship to their illness changes depending on context. We collected and transcribed interviews from a small cohort of six individuals with histories of an illness process not restricted to a single disease category. Through discussion between two readers, we identified and categorized all medical disease referents and associated words (possessives and demonstratives) in the interview transcripts into medical disease referents and medical abbreviations, pronouns and other and into different contexts from within the narrative (pre- vs. post diagnosis, medical vs. non-medical, moments of metaperspective-taking and moments of empowering self-dialogue), after which we performed goodness of fit statistics to determine which categories and associated words occurred more frequently in which contexts. We found that compared to all other disease referents, medical disease referents and medical abbreviations were significantly more likely to occur in medical contexts and were significantly less likely to be attached to the words "this" or "these," words defined as "indicating a thing or person present or near (actually in space or time, or ideally in thought)" according to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Conversely, it was found that contexts involving moments of meta-perspective- taking on illness as well as moments of empowering self-dialogue had significantly more use of "this" or "these" acting as a disease referent on its own and attached to disease referents than in other contexts. Overall, the results point to restriction of medical terms for illness within medical contexts and decreased use of words indicating closeness to the speaker for medical terms. Implications of this early study include a novel framework for future analysis of unstructured patient narratives.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28266800
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