Novice identification of melanoma: Not quite as straightforward as the abcds

36Citations
Citations of this article
53Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The "ABCD" mnemonic to assist non-experts' diagnosis of melanoma is widely promoted; however, there are good reasons to be sceptical about public education strategies based on analytical, rule-based approaches - such as ABCD (i.e. Asymmetry, Border Irregularity, Colour Uniformity and Diameter). Evidence suggests that accurate diagnosis of skin lesions is achieved predominately through non-analytical pattern recognition (via training examples) and not by rule-based algorithms. If the ABCD are to function as a useful public education tool they must be used reliably by untrained novices, with low inter-observer and intra-diagnosis variation, but with maximal inter-diagnosis differences. The three subjective properties (the ABCs of the ABCD) were investigated experimentally: 33 laypersons scored 40 randomly selected lesions (10 lesions × 4 diagnoses: benign naevi, dysplastic naevi, melanomas, seborrhoeic keratoses) for the three properties on visual analogue scales. The results (n=3,960) suggest that novices cannot use the ABCs reliably to discern benign from malignant lesions © 2011 The Authors.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Aldridge, R. B., Zanotto, M., Ballerini, L., Fisher, R. B., & Rees, J. L. (2011). Novice identification of melanoma: Not quite as straightforward as the abcds. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 91(2), 125–130. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-1070

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free