You've probably noticed how few things in life you can actually control. Can you control what happens in the world around you? Nope, there's new evidence against that every day. What happens in your own life? No, the "slings and arrows of outrageous fortune" come for us all. What your spouse does, or your kids? Good luck with that. Well, how about your own behavior? You can control what you do and how you react to events, right? Well, maybe. Two Minds Theory suggests that behavior is not under your conscious control. In the original theory diagram (also reproduced below), notice that any new environmental event sets off a reaction going down two tracks -- the Narrative Mind on top, the Intuitive Mind on the bottom -- but the tracks never rejoin at the end. Only the lower track, the Intuitive Mind, has an arrow leading to behavior. Unlike Leventhal's model , where both the cognitive and the emotional track have arrows pointing to the endpoint of the diagram, i...
I'm one of the authors on a new study by Dr. Mustafa Ozkaynak's research team, which looks at how emergency department (ED) nurses change their decision-making process when they become fatigued. In a previous paper , we found that fatigue was common in ED nurses, particularly toward the end of their work shift, and that nurses' fatigue was more often characterized as physical rather than mental or emotional -- in other words, this really represented being physically tired at the end of the day, not being burned-out or depressed. Nevertheless, physical fatigue has important effects on nurses' decision-making in the ED. Based on nurses' qualitative reports, fatigue has mixed effects on their clinical performance. Nurses said that they definitely cut corners when they were tired, for example in terms of documentation in the electronic health record. They felt that they were less careful about double-checking things, and might be more likely to make snap decisions. We...