Author: Brigitte Durieux
Posted: October 2019

Context

Recent qualitative studies have implicated uncertainty as a barrier within Palliative Care (PC) (McIlvennan, 2016; Basu, 2018; Chow, 2018; Kim, 2018). In the serious illness context, there exists inherent prognostic uncertainty (Mishel, 1981; McCormick, 2002; Oishi, 2014) which must be discussed in conversations between patient and clinician (e.g. high-risk/high-payoff treatment trials, prognosis, possibility for procedure complications, next-step options). Recent literature has also described the presence of both verbally-expressed and thematic uncertainty acting influentially on patient experience and decision-making (Brashers, 2001; Etkind, 2016; Basu, 2018). It is well known that the framing of information can affect its reception; this remains the case with expressions of uncertainty, as different framing styles can be used to imply information that would otherwise be stated outright. Uncertainty is significant and prevalent in PC for patients with advanced cancer (Temel, 2016), and managing that uncertainty and its transmission appears to be one mechanism underlying PC impact on improving quality of life (Gramling, 2018).  

Uncertainty Management is a central conceptual feature of patient-centered communication in cancer care (Epstein, 2007), but little is empirically known about uncertainty management (Epstein, 2013; Gramling, 2013). Understanding this complex idea will require automation or semi-automation of conversation feature measurement in large sample studies (Tulsky, 2017).

As is the case with any variables, language measures must be backed by a conceptual framework (i.e., one must be able to recognize or mark something to quantify it). As a host of words may all signify uncertainty, all possible target uncertainty terms can be combined to a corpus. This corpus can be used by Natural Language Processing (NLP) to generate a sum frequency measure for all uncertainty words within the conversation. We have created a corpus of uncertainty language with conceptual basis to provide us with measurable variables (frequency, proportion within the conversation, etc.). The resulting data allow us to compare a conversation’s uncertainty scores with other conversational features and/or survey data. 


Methods

Word List Generation: The goal was to draft a corpus for conversational uncertainty within the Palliative Care context. We created an initial list of 51 Uncertainty Words from relevant literature (Vincze, 2014; Strekalova, 2017) to detect uncertainty words in medical contexts, and expanded this list to 186 alternate forms (plurals, etc.). Next, we identified synonyms for each term using WordNet (Princeton, 2010), a lexical database for the English language, and the Random House Digital Thesaurus. From this list of 1,229 terms, we removed any words that did not appear at least once in the PCCRI textual database, and removed any words that were not synonymous with the target definition of the associated original term. We collapsed variants of the same word into their stems (to avoid unintentionally classifying variants of the same word into different uncertainty sub-types) to get a dictionary of 246 terms. The whole lab group met to adjudicate the relevance of each term within the dictionary, resulting in a list of 155 most relevant terms. Terms that did not require adjudication, as there was initial group consensus on relevance, encompassed a list of 113 words, which we refer to as the Strong Subgroup.

Word Finder: First, we identified all words considered speech (i.e., we excluded transcript labels for non-speech events, such as coughing or laughing). Second, we stripped all leading and trailing whitespaces and punctuation surrounding each word to create a simple ordered string of words separated by one space. Third, we used regular expressions and our uncertainty search terms to identify all instances of the target uncertainty language in the full PCCRI text dataset (by conversation and by speaker (i.e. patient/family or clinician)) within each conversation. We wrote into the script a list of exception rules to keep irrelevant words with a target stem from being added, and to avoid negations (target words with altered meaning due to a preceding ‘no’, ‘un’, ‘not’, or ‘non’). We manually checked five full transcripts using the Uncertainty Word List and identified no errors in the algorithm.

Defining Uncertainty Subtypes: Determining subgroups of uncertainty was an iterative process. We first explored the existing groupings presented in existing literature. Notably, we began working off the groups defined in a 2017 Strekalova et al. paper: possibility-indicating verbs, hedging verbs, qualifiers, direct expressions of uncertainty, and question-asking. We also explored groupings based on Han’s Taxonomy of Uncertainty (Han, 2011). In Han’s conceptual model, uncertainty is organized into three primary domains: ambiguity, complexity and probability. Ambiguity involves information subject to interpretation (whether that is due to imprecision, conflicting data/opinions, or a lack of information). Complexity is implicated in situations involving an array of determining factors and/or interpretive signals. Probability concerns the likelihood of a potential future event to occur (i.e. indeterminacy of outcome) (Babrow, 1998; Han, 2011). To look for natural clusters of uncertainty terms based on our terms’ definitions, we also used a visualization program, Gephi (Bastian, 2009), to graph the “proximity” of one term to another using strength of equivalence from synonym directories. Ultimately, we settled on uncertainty subtypes of Hedging Terms, Possibility Indicators, Confusion Terms, and Prognosis Uncertainty Terms.


Subtype Definitions

Hedging Terms: words used to suggest something rather than state it; by using ‘think’ instead of ‘know’, one adds some level of uncertainty to the statement that follows. Hedging implies speculation (Vincze, 2014).

Possibility Indicators: words giving some uncertain probability or possibility to the associated statement. These include modal verbs.

Confusion Terms: verbal expressions of direct confusion, complexity, a lack of knowledge, or uncertainty.


Uncertainty Corpora

Team-Adjudicated Uncertainty Corpus: “Strong Subgroup” (*= stem)
a bit contemplate hope most likely presume take a chance
a little convoluted hypothesi* most of the time presuppose theor*
allegedly could imagine nearly probability think
allude to curiosity imply not certain probabl* try
ambiguity deem in all likelihood not convinced prognosticate uncertain
anticipate discombobulate in all probability not know quite unclear
approximately do not understand incertain not sure reasonable unconvinced
assess don’t know inconstant often relatively undecided
baffle don’t understand infer perceive risk unexpected
befuddle doubt  kind of perchance roughly unlikely
bewilder dubious likel* perhaps seem unpredictable
call into question dumbfound may perplex should unsure
chance estimate maybe plausibl* slightly usually
changeable expect might ponder somewhat vary
complex  feasibl* misinterpret possibility sort of virtually
complicated foresee misjudge possibl* speculate whether
confound generally mistrust  postulate suggest whether or not
confus* guess misunderstand potential suppose worr*
consider hint mixed up predict suspect
Uncertainty Subtype Corpus: “Hedging Terms” (*= stem)
allude to doubt  hope misjudge presuppose suppose
anticipate estimate hypothesi* perceive prognosticate suspect
assess expect imagine ponder risk theor*
consider foresee imply postulate seem think
contemplate guess infer predict speculate worr*
deem hint misinterpret presume suggest  
Uncertainty Subtype Corpus: “Possibility Indicators” (*= stem)
could feasibl* may nearly possibility probabl*
chance in all likelihood maybe perchance possibl* reasonable
changeable in all probability might perhaps potential  
generally likel* most likely plausibl* probability  
Uncertainty Subtype Corpus: “Confusion Terms” (*= stem)
ambiguity confound dubious mixed up perplex unlikely
baffled confus* dumbfound not certain uncertain unpredictable
befuddle convoluted incertain not convinced unclear unsure
bewilder discombobulate inconstant not know unconvinced  
complex  don’t know mistrust  not sure undecided
complicated don’t understand misunderstand not understand unexpected

Initial Results

Figure 1: Uncertainty distribution becomes tighter as search term list is revised
Figure 2: Average percent uncertainty (percent uncertainty words used out of all words in each conversation per subgroup) per conversation, across 231 palliative care consults

References

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