Guest guest Posted July 31, 2006 Report Share Posted July 31, 2006 August 2006 issue of Scientific American magazine features cover story on " Secrets of the Expert Mind " . It deals largely with chess mastery, as this area has a long history of scientific study, but also mentions issues of expertise in areas including medicine. " Just as a master can recall all the moves in a game he has played, so can an accomplished musician often reconstruct the score to a sonata heard just once. And just as the chess master often finds the best move in a flash, an expert physician can sometimes make an accurate diagnosis within moments of laying eyes on a patient. " The gist of the scientific findings is that motivation and intensity of study, especially challenging oneself, over a period of about 10 years, results in expertise or mastery, as opposed to natural talent or attaining formal credentials. The learning process involves a long process of meticulously working out pathways of relationships and their logic, which become built into an ability to recognize salient features more quickly and accurately only eventually being able to make a correct choice without an explicit detailed analysis. I am reminded of the analytical rigor of the Shen-Hammer pulse diagnosis training, and then the speed and accuracy with which Dr. John Shen could diagnose a patient. This relates, I suspect, to the use of pulse diagnostic instrumentation. As was the thrust of the McCullough-Bronfman system (at least as published in the late 1990's), the intent was to help with the education of clinicians, rather than to automate diagnosis. One area where this approach might help is that of arriving at unambiguous terminology for describing pulse qualities. As in the Shen-Hammer training, there's an important distinction between accurate, communicable description of pulse characteristics, on the one hand, and the interpretation of their clinical meaning, on the other hand. Having struggled in TCM school with a sketchy, at best, training in pulse-description and -reading, and having later studied the Shen-Hammer system, I am naturally suspicious of commonly encountered pulse descriptions. I think the common terms are used to describe widely varying sensations. In many cases, I believe the individual practitioner may have a cultivated system which is, to them, clinical accurate and useful. But, without sitting down with them and comparing terminology to empirical sensations, I have little confidence that we communicate information of pulse-reading that well. An in-depth look at this kind of problem can be found in an article by Dr. Leon Hammer, <http://www.yaviah.addr.com/articles/3tradition.pdf>Tradition and Revision; Clinical Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine; Vol. 3 No. 1, 2002. (can be found through the website dragonrises.org, on the page " Dr Hammer's Articles " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.