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What I Read in 2022

01.02.23 // Reading

2022 was the ninth(!) year that I’ve kept track of my book consumption. I’m still trying to get better at capturing even just some brief thoughts/impressions about what I read (especially the fiction, which sometimes fades from memory almost as fast as I can read it). I still read most of my nonfiction on my Kindle (or on the kindle app on my phone) because of the very handy highlight feature. A fraction of those highlights typically then find their way into my digital brain archive and some eventually become posts on this very site.

Prior years here: 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014.

  1. Atomic Habits (I’ve gone through this best-selling-in-whole-world book as a centering routine for the New Year a few times now)
  2. The Almanack of Naval Ravikant (some decent lines/ideas, my favorites are in this post)
  3. Appleseed by Matt Bell (environmental speculative fiction, a sprawling epic with well-crafted prose; Mr. Bell very nicely rejected a short story I wrote for his literary journal back in 2010)
  4. The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch (Ocean’s Eleven meets epic fantasy; these books are awesome, and one of the unusual parts of these stories is that while this world has magic, the main characters are just blokes equally out of their element in dealing with it).
  5. Red Seas Under Red Skies by Scott Lynch (Gentleman Bastards #2)
  6. Republic of Thieves by Scott Lynch (Gentleman Bastards #3)
  7. The Poppy War by RF Kuang (way younger than me so we didn’t overlap, but Kuang apparently went to my high school)
  8. Termination Shock by Neal Stephenson (Stephenson, who first coined the term metaverse, writes super engaging sprawing near future speculative fiction. This is climate-related and just great)
  9. The Fifth Season (Broken Earth Trilogy #1) by NK Jemisin (2016 Hugo Award winner, gosh this is so good. May also be the only book where a partial second-person perspective totally works)
  10. Pangea Online: Death and Axes by SL Rowland
  11. Pangea Online: Magic and Mayhem by SL Rowland
  12. Pangea Online: Vials and Tribulations by SL Rowland
  13. Girl Logic by Iliza Shlesinger (my wife bought this but Iliza is probably now the most famous person I sorta knew growing up. She was a few years ahead of me in high school and probably even briefly knew my name at the time).
  14. Forward Collection edited by Blake Crouch
  15. The Obelisk Gate (Broken Earth Trilogy #2) by NK Jemisin
  16. The Stone Sky (Broken Earth Trilogy #3) by NK Jemisin (Again, very original. Not always the most fun read but a great story and incredible world-building).
  17. Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang (the title story is the mind-bender that gave rise to the movie Arrival)
  18. Exhalation by Ted Chiang (the newer collection of this award-winning writer of speculative short fiction, also unusually thoughtful)
  19. The Dragon Republic (Poppy War Trilogy #2) by RF Kuang
  20. Robot Dreams by Sara Varon
  21. Just Keep Buying by Nick Maggiuli (data-driven personal finance, some takeaways here)
  22. The Burning God (Poppy War Trilogy #3) by RF Kuang
  23. Lock In by John Scalzi (a master of the short, snappy, snarky, sci-fi thriller)
  24. Head On by John Scalzi (a sequel, but both are totally stand-alone)
  25. He Who Fights with Monsters by Travis Deverell (yes, it’s silly LitRPG, but the protagonist this time is Australian.)
  26. He Who Fights with Monsters 2 by Travis Deverell
  27. He Who Fights with Monsters 3 by Travis Deverell
  28. He Who Fights with Monsters 4 by Travis Deverell
  29. He Who Fights with Monsters 5 by Travis Deverell
  30. He Who Fights with Monsters 6 by Travis Deverell
  31. The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi (light, funny, enjoyable; though not as funny as Red Shirts)
  32. Wabi Sabi by Beth Kempton
  33. Warrior of Light by Paulo Coelho (I really liked The Alchemist. This was a bland platitude companion, 100% not worth it).
  34. The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa
  35. Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl
  36. The Simple Path to Wealth by JL Collins
  37. Sufficiently Advanced Magic (Arcane Ascension #1) by Andrew Rowe (Meh. Magic system and plot, not so bad. Characters and writing, pretty painful even for YA.)
  38. On the Shoulders of Titans (Arcane Ascension #2) by Andrew Rowe
  39. The Torch that Ignites the Stars (Arcane Ascension #3) by Andrew Rowe
  40. Consider This by Chuck Palahniuk (Writing advice from the author of Fight Club among others; this was really good writing about writing).
  41. Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett (two of fantasy’s greats, working together in a way distinct from either alone)
  42. Jade City (Green Bone Saga #1) by Fonda Lee (Winner of the World Fantasy Award. The world-building is a bit a slow burn but this series ended up being exceptionally good.)
  43. Four Thousand Weeks by Oliver Burkeman (Refreshing “time management” that reads like happy nihilism)
  44. The Lion Tracker’s Guide to Life by Boyd Varty (briefly quoted here)
  45. Jade War (Green Bone Saga #2) by Fonda Lee
  46. Pacchi Festival (Bushido Online #4) by Nikita Thorn
  47. The Order by Jeremy Robinson (I didn’t get how Robinson was trying to pull together all of his stand-alone novels into a giant universe with a whole bunch of crossovers at first, but it’s working surprisingly well).
  48. Reckoning (The Beginning After the End #9) by TurtleMe
  49. Building a Second Brain by Tiago Forte (nothing convinced me to change my current workflow)
  50. Jade Legacy (Green Bone Saga #3) by Fonda Lee
  51. He Who Fights with Monsters 7 by Travis Deverell
  52. Rules for a Knight by Ethan Hawke
  53. Babel by RF Kuang (This was a singular book, nothing else quite like it)
  54. Dawnshard by Brandon Sanderson (Stormlight novella)
  55. The Android’s Dream by John Scalzi (I can see how the author who wrote this amusing book would go on to write the excellent Interdependency Trilogy)
  56. Unsouled by Will Wight (Cradle #1) (More progression fantasy)
  57. Soulsmith by Will Wight (Cradle #2)
  58. Blackflame by Will Wight (Cradle #3)
  59. Skysworn by Will Wight (Cradle #4)
  60. Ghostwater by Will Wight (Cradle #5)
  61. Underlord by Will Wight (Cradle #6)
  62. Uncrowned by Will Wight (Cradle #7)
  63. Wintersteel by Will Wight (Cradle #8)
  64. Bloodline by Will Wight (Cradle #9)
  65. Reaper by Will Wight (Cradle #10)
  66. Dreadgod by Will Wight (Cradle #11)
  67. Gilded Ghost (Ripple System #3) by Kyle Kirrin
  68. Agent to the Stars by John Scalzi
  69. Old Man’s War by John Scalzi
  70. The Doors of Eden by Adrian Tchaikovsky
  71. Throne of the Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed (Arabian Nights-esque fantasy. I’ve been meaning to read my copy of this ever since I published one of Ahmed’s stories in Nanoism, which was subsequently a finalist for the annual Best Small Fictions Anthology.
  72. Gallant by VE Schwab (Schwab is a great and very-bestselling writer. This ghost story reminds me a bit more of Neil Gaiman’s work.)
  73. The Black Prism (Lightbringer #1) by Brent Weeks (at first I wasn’t sold on the magic system/world-building but I was wrong. This series is great).
  74. The Blinding Knife (Lightbringer #2) by Brent Weeks
  75. The Broken Eye (Lightbringer #3) by Brent Weeks
  76. The Blood Mirror (Lightbringer #4) by Brent Weeks
  77. The Burning White (Lightbringer #5) by Brent Weeks (a rare satisfying series conclusion!)
  78. Farmer in the Sky by Robert Heinlein (some of these classic sci-fi books really haven’t aged well)
  79. Methuselah’s Children by Robert Heinlein
  80. He Who Fights with Monsters 8 by Travis Deverell
  81. The Lost Metal (Mistborn era two, #4, the conclusion) by Brandon Sanderson (Honestly fell kinda flat? The whole second arc just isn’t as good as the first, and I’ll admit I find the overall Cosmere integration slow burn to be mostly frustrating at this point)
  82. Noise by Daniel Kahneman (I’ll be quoting this book in more posts, but here’s a taste)
  83. Khaos by Jeremy Robinson (the penultimate volume in the Infinite timeline)

 

My son is getting older, so in addition to me reading to him, he also now reads a ton to himself, and sometimes I read a book or two in the series he’s currently enjoying or to introduce him to a new one:

  1. The rest of this Pokémon box set
  2. No One Returns from the Enchanted Forest by Robin Robinson
  3. Caveboy Dave by Aaron Reynolds and Phil McAndrew
  4. Sunken Tower by Tait Howard
  5. Some of the Wings of Fire graphic novel renditions by Tui T. Sutherland (talking dragons!)
  6. Boulder Brothers Mo and Jo by Sarah Lynn
  7. Cat Kid Comic Club Perspectives by Dav Pilkey
  8. Lightfall: The Girl & the Galdurian (Lightfall #1) by Tim Probert (such a beautiful art style; this was great)
  9. Lightfall: Shadow of the Bird (Lightfall #2) by Tim Probert
  10. Portions of the Minecraft Woodsword Chronicles by Nick Eliopulos
  11. Star Knights by Kay Davault (also a really cute standalone graphic novel)
  12. All five of the 5 Worlds graphic novels by Mark Siegel (which were awesome, he loved these)
  13. The first two books in the classic Chronicles of Narnia series by CS Lewis, which I kept in great condition from childhood for just this purpose!
  14. Several entries in the Amulet series by Kazu Kibuishi, which he thought were super epic. Fantastic art.

The ABR Finesses its Bylaws

12.09.22 // Radiology

A few years ago I published my deep dive into the bylaws of the American Board of Radiology. Bylaws are boring, dry documents that most people don’t care about and even fewer read. But they do shed light on the culture of an organization and its priorities. The ABR’s were comically nefarious. For example, their old conflict of interest policy (emphasis mine):

It is the policy of this Corporation that the legal duty of loyalty owed to this Corporation by a Governor serving on the Board of Governors of this Corporation requires the Governor to act in the best interests of this Corporation, even if discharging that duty requires the Governor to support actions that might be contrary to the views, interests, policies, or actions of another organization of which the Governor is a member, or to the discipline of which the Governor is a member. Consistent with a Governor’s duty of loyalty, a person serving as a Governor of this Corporation does not serve or act as the “representative” of any other organization, and his or her “constituency” as a Governor of this Corporation is solely this Corporation and is not any other organization or its members.

The ABR approved an update to their bylaws on November 2, 2022 (available here), and they’ve finessed that bit by removing the bolded language above. It now reads:

It is the policy of this Corporation that the legal duty of loyalty owed to this Corporation by an individual while serving in the capacity as a member of the Board of Governors or Board of Trustees requires the individual to act in the best interests of this Corporation. Consistent with the duty of loyalty, a person serving as a member of the Board of Governors or Board of Trustees does not serve or act as the “representative” of any other organization, and said member’s “constituency” as a member of the Board of Governors or Board of Trustees of this Corporation is solely this Corporation and is not any other organization or its members.

So they’ve removed that choice verbiage requiring selling out radiology itself in the interest of the ABR: “even if discharging that duty requires the Governor to support actions that might be contrary to the views, interests, policies, or actions of another organization of which the Governor is a member, or to the discipline of which the Governor is a member.”

Good for them.

On a related note, in case you’re wondering, the composition of the “executive compensation committee” is unchanged:

Executive Compensation Committee. The Executive Compensation Committee will carry out the Board of Governors’ responsibilities for designing, managing and annually reviewing Executive compensation and the Executive compensation policy. This committee will consist of the President, President Elect, and at least one (1) additional member from the Board of Governors appointed by the President. The President will chair the committee.

As I mused in my previous post:

I love that the committee that handles executive compensation is chaired by the president and then attended by the president-elect and “at least one additional” presidential appointee. Good thing that a conflict of interest for the ABR is just when a Governor cares about something outside of the ABR.

Asking AI about AI in Medicine

12.06.22 // Medicine, Radiology

I had a brief chat with OpenAI’s ChatGPT about noise, radiology, and AI in medicine:

Human: Summarize the book Noise by Daniel Kahneman
AI: Noise by Daniel Kahneman is a book that examines how our minds work in a noisy, uncertain world. It dives into the cognitive biases and heuristics we use to make decisions with limited information, and explains how they can lead us astray. The book covers topics such as perception, intuition, and decision-making, and explores how noise and confusion can shape our lives and our thinking.

Human: How does the book argue that noise impacts radiology?
AI: In Noise, Daniel Kahneman argues that noise can have a major impact on radiology. He explains that radiologists are often subject to cognitive biases like confirmation bias and anchoring bias, which can lead them to make decisions that are not in the best interest of their patients. Additionally, he shows how noise can affect diagnostic accuracy and decision-making, making it harder for radiologists to provide accurate treatments and diagnoses.

Human: How could radiology address those limitations?
AI: Radiologists can address the limitations of noise in radiology by taking steps to reduce cognitive biases and increase accuracy. These steps include utilizing evidence-based decision-making, double-checking results for accuracy, and employing advanced imaging technologies such as computer-aided detection systems. Additionally, radiologists should strive to keep up with advances in medical technology and imaging techniques so that they can identify any noise or errors in their images.

Human: What are the current limitations in utilizing AI in radiology?
AI: Currently, one of the biggest limitations in utilizing AI in radiology is the potential for errors and false positives. While AI systems have the potential to be more accurate than human radiologists, there is still a risk that the AI system will miss diagnoses or misinterpret images. Additionally, AI systems can be costly to implement, and require significant computing power, which may not be feasible in many medical settings.

Human: What would be the easiest type of medicine to outsource to AI?
AI: The easiest type of medicine to outsource to AI would be administrative tasks such as scheduling appointments and completing insurance forms. AI can quickly and accurately complete these types of tasks, saving time and resources for medical professionals.

Even the machines think there’s some low-hanging fruit out there.

Hindsight in the Valley of the Normal

11.16.22 // Miscellany

From Nobel-laureate Daniel Kahneman’s Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgement:

More broadly, our sense of understanding the world depends on our extraordinary ability to construct narratives that explain the events we observe. The search for causes is almost always successful because causes can be drawn from an unlimited reservoir of facts and beliefs about the world.

[…]

This continuous causal interpretation of reality is how we “understand” the world. Our sense of understanding life as it unfolds consists of the steady flow of hindsight in the valley of the normal. This sense is fundamentally causal: new events, once known, eliminate alternatives, and the narrative leaves little room for uncertainty. As we know from classic research on hindsight, even when subjective uncertainty does exist for a while, memories of it are largely erased when the uncertainty is resolved.

Noise is a good book. It’s not an exciting book—though neither is Thinking, Fast and Slow for that matter—but it’s an important book. Bias is important, but human noisiness and our imperfect and very noisy systems are also important: Judgments (predictions, decisions) are hard to get right, and so much of the world’s punditry is just storytelling.

Doctors make dozens if not hundreds of little and big decisions every day. And I know that not only I am noisy, but I’m noisy in a variety of ways. A big part of my deliberate practice as it pertains to radiology is to try to limit how much noise distorts my decision-making and the quality of my reports.

We want to be not just good but consistently so.

 

ABR soliciting nominations for its Board of Governors

11.12.22 // Radiology

The bylaws of the American Board of Radiology are interesting. I’ve written about them here, and you should read that post. Go ahead, I’ll wait.

Relevent to an email blast the ABR sent out this week is section 4.3:

Section 4.3. Election of Governors. Nominees shall be solicited from the Board of Trustees and Board of Governors, and may be solicited from any appropriate professional organization. Professional organizations shall provide such nominations in writing. An affirmative vote of at least three-fourths (3/4ths) of the entire Board of Governors shall be necessary for the election of any nominee to the Board of Governors.

The Board of Governors is the main decision-making body of the ABR. Historically, as you might surmise, it’s been a pretty insular group. The people already in charge nominate their friends and colleagues, most of whom have already put in the time and effort to earn a place in this upper echelon through years of service to the organization.

As I wrote in that post:

If you didn’t know, there are currently 8 Governors, and they basically run the show. Lincoln’s famous “team of rivals” approach this is not. The current people in power shall nominate their replacements and other organizations may, but the key for any hopeful member is making sure that you fit in with the cool kids, essentially guaranteeing that no one with substantially differing views would ever make it to the upper echelon.

On November 7, the ABR sent an email out to all diplomates (people who are board-certified):

The American Board of Radiology (ABR) is seeking interested candidates to serve on its Board of Governors. The Board of Governors discharges the fiduciary duties of the Board through its oversight of the business and affairs of the ABR.

The ABR recognizes the benefits inherent in a diverse community and seeks individuals with varied experiences, perspectives, and backgrounds. Interested candidates must be board certified by the ABR and willing to participate in Continuing Certification (MOC). Those from nonacademic practice environments are especially encouraged to apply.

And the nomination process for those interested candidates?

Nomination Process: Interested candidates should send a curriculum vitae and a letter of interest before November 15, 2022, to Brent Wagner, MD, ABR Executive Director (bwagner@theabr.org).

How about that.

Now presumably the actually election process is still the same (as is the impressive Conflict of Interest policy), but I believe this is the first time the ABR has publicly asked for all-comers. Now that doesn’t mean they’ll actually take any of those candidates seriously or that such candidates would ever comprise more than a single spot on the board, but—nonetheless—I would encourage anyone interested to apply.

Improving my Figs

11.10.22 // Medicine

I finally broke down and bought a pair of Figs so I could try to fit in with the young folk.

But I had to do a little surgery with my seam ripper:

Just because I want to pretend I can pull off squeezing into some joggers doesn’t mean I want four(!) separate branding labels on a pair of scrubs of all things.

Now they’re closer to the fantasy world where the generic hospital scrub pants have regular pockets.

Explanations for the 2022 Official Step 3 Practice Questions

11.02.22 // Medicine

Here are my explanations for the August 2022 update of the official practice materials. (As of 2024, the PDF of these questions is no longer available, but the 2020 set is still archived and nearly identical to the 2022 PDF.)

The asterisks (*) signify one of the only two new questions compared with the prior set.

My explanations for the old 2020 set are here and the 2018/2019 set are here. There were 71 new questions in 2020 vs 2019, so going through that older set may still be worth your time. The one before that, which I explained here, was revised in November 2017.

You can find my thoughts on preparing for Step 3 here. Since writing that post, the main substantive change in the exam has been the ability to schedule CCS on a nonconsecutive day. In short, I think the free materials and UWorld should be enough for most folks. If you want book recs, they’re in that post. If you need another question source, I haven’t tried any of them, but you can get 10% off the popular BoardVitals if you’re interested by using code BW10.

As for this free 137-question practice exam, Blocks 1 and 2 are “Foundations of Independent Practice” (FIP). These should take up to 1 hour each. Blocks 3 and 4 are “Advanced Clinical Medicine” (ACM). These should take up to 45 minutes each. Total practice time should be no more than 3:30 if taken under test-day conditions. (more…)

Perceptions of Radiology MOC

10.21.22 // Radiology

In August, the results of a large ACR survey about radiologists’ opinions concerning MOC were released. The summary:

Similar proportions judged the existing program as excellent or very good (36%), or fair or poor (35%), with 27% neutral. MOC–CC was perceived more often as excellent or very good by those who were grandfathered yet still participating in MOC, were in academic practice, were in an urban setting, were older, or had a role with the ABR. In contrast, MOC–CC was more often judged as fair or poor by those who were not grandfathered, were in private practice, were in a rural setting, or were younger.

It’s a pretty sharp divide. Perhaps it is no great surprise that ABR volunteers and grandfathered academics are among those who view the ABR’s offering most favorably. The whole paper is worth a read, and the survey construction itself was very involved.

I’m not personally involved in any of this work, but the story behind why the survey even occurred (which I’m relaying secondhand) is perhaps the most interesting part.

If you recall, there was an ACR Taskforce on Certification in Radiology that was initially authorized in 2019 and concluded in 2020. You can read my highlights and analysis of their work here.

You also might not recall said task force, because their work apparently marks the only time in history that the ACR Board of Chancellors voted against authorizing a task force to submit their findings as a paper to the JACR. What could have been a paper shared with the broader radiology community was instead buried in a lonely random corner of the ACR website.

This is politics at work, of course.

Behind the scenes, the executive committee asked the task force to water down their language and conclusions, remove certain points, and generally “be nice.” The ACR, trying to repair some historically sour relationships with other radiology societies, didn’t want to be mean to the ABR. It probably doesn’t help when inbred leadership positions across multiple societies read like a game of musical chairs. It was apparently after multiple rounds of softening edits that the task force report was eventually buried anyway.

As a consolation, the board did permit a next-step survey in order to ascertain the true feelings of the radiology community (and not just the task force’s presumably squeaky wheels). The ACR used an outside consultant to help generate a fair survey, and then at the subsequent request of leadership, all “irrelevant” questions concerning the ongoing lawsuit, handling of COVID-19/testing delays, and the kerfuffle over the MOC agreement, etc were excised.

The survey results paper was initially submitted to JACR in 2021 and was—as you may have surmised—also rejected (though please note that the JACR is editorially independent). Much back and forth ensued—largely in order to limit perceived “bias against the ABR”—and the paper you see was finally published a year later.

In the end, thanks to editorial assistance, the limitations section is longer than the neutered discussion.

Joining and Leaving Private Equity: A Radiologist’s Story

10.19.22 // Radiology

Previously in the PE series, we spoke with someone who joined a practice that had previously been purchased (before eventually leaving). In this entry, we’re hearing from someone who joined an independent practice and was an associate in the work-up when the group sold.

Just like last time, I’ve sanitized names and some details. This case study is food for thought, not an indictment of a specific group or corporate entity.

(more…)

Forgiveness App is Live

10.17.22 // Finance

The official application for the Biden student loan forgiveness is now live. Impossible to say if any legal action will block it in the end, but for now the safest thing to do if you qualify is to apply as soon as possible. It’ll take about 2 minutes.

Apply here.

 

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