A clinician is diagnosing a patient with a rare presentation of lupus. The patient has 4 of the 11 ACR criteria. The clinician says: 'Given the constellation of findings, lupus is the most probable diagnosis.' This reflects:
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A
Inductive probabilistic reasoning — the available evidence makes lupus likely without guaranteeing it
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B
Deductive certainty — 4 criteria are sufficient for a confirmed diagnosis
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C
Diagnostic closure — the case is resolved with lupus as the confirmed diagnosis
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D
Heuristic shortcutting — using criteria lists to avoid thorough reasoning