Ian Pitchford

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One of my favorite examples of the usefulness of fourfold tables comes from my teacher Amos Tversky. It’s called the two-poison problem. When Amos administered a version of it to MDs at major hospitals and medical schools, as well as to statisticians and business school graduates, nearly every one of them got the answer so wrong that the hypothetical patients would have died!
The Organized Mind: The Science of Preventing Overload, Increasing Productivity and Restoring Your Focus
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