The hard part is noticing early on, and knowing the difference between a not-important and an important change
Hmm. This sounds like it would be best done with a mix of Type 1 and Type 2 processes, e.g. Type 1 flags things for your attention and Type 2 assesses whether they actually deserve your attention, or something like that. But I’m not a domain expert.
I think you’re right. The Type 1 flags come from a combination of theory and hands-on experience, and become reflexes quite early on. Mine work fairly well. The type 2 part, assessing whether or not it deserves your attention, seems to be to be about 10 million times harder for me, and is mostly what I’m trying to work on. I ask my preceptor “is this normal or should I be freaked out?” a lot. Of course, she rarely tells me straight up, and usually tries to make me reason through it on my own with a series of guiding questions.
Thanks for the clarification!
Hmm. This sounds like it would be best done with a mix of Type 1 and Type 2 processes, e.g. Type 1 flags things for your attention and Type 2 assesses whether they actually deserve your attention, or something like that. But I’m not a domain expert.
I think you’re right. The Type 1 flags come from a combination of theory and hands-on experience, and become reflexes quite early on. Mine work fairly well. The type 2 part, assessing whether or not it deserves your attention, seems to be to be about 10 million times harder for me, and is mostly what I’m trying to work on. I ask my preceptor “is this normal or should I be freaked out?” a lot. Of course, she rarely tells me straight up, and usually tries to make me reason through it on my own with a series of guiding questions.