al., “A Room with a Cue: Personality Judgments Based on
Offices and Bedrooms,” Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology 82, no. 3 (2002): 379–398.
On the issue of malpractice lawsuits and physicians, see an
interview with Jeffrey Allen and Alice Burkin by Berkeley Rice:
“How Plaintiffs’ Lawyers Pick Their Targets,” Medical Economics
(April 24, 2000); Wendy Levinson et al., “Physician-Patient
Communication: The Relationship with Malpractice Claims
Among Primary Care Physicians and Surgeons, “Journal of the
American Medical Association 277, no. 7 (1997): 553-559; and
Nalini Ambady et al., “Surgeons’ Tone of Voice: A Clue to
Malpractice History,” Surgery 132, no. 1 (2002): 5–9.
CHAPTER TWO. THE LOCKED DOOR: THE SECRET LIFE OF SNAP
DECISIONS
For Hoving on Berenson etc., see False Impressions: The Hunt for
Big Time Art Fakes (London: Andre Deutsch, 1996), 19–20.
On the scrambled-sentence test, see Thomas K. Srull and
Robert S. Wyer, “The Role of Category Accessibility in the
Interpretation of Information About Persons: Some
Determinants and Implications,” Journal of Personality and Social