Decision Making

Master the UCAT: Decision Making Section

The Decision Making (DM) subtest evaluates your ability to apply logic and reasoning to reach conclusions, evaluate arguments, and analyze data. In a clinical setting, healthcare professionals must frequently make high-stakes decisions based on complex, sometimes conflicting, information. This section assesses the mental fluidity required for those moments.

Unlike Verbal Reasoning, which is text-heavy, Decision Making incorporates visual data, mathematical probability, and abstract logic.

Section Format & Timing

Precision and speed are equally important here. You must be able to switch between different types of logical thinking—from calculating odds to interpreting Venn diagrams—without losing momentum.

FeatureDetail
Number of Questions29 Questions
Time Allotted31 Minutes (+ 1 minute instruction time)
FormatIndependent scenarios (Text, Charts, or Diagrams)
Average Time per Question~64 Seconds

Key Topics and Question Types

The Decision Making syllabus is diverse, covering six primary areas of logical analysis. Success requires a mastery of each specific “rule set.”

1. Syllogisms

You are given a set of facts and must decide if a series of conclusions “follow” or “do not follow.”

  • The Rule: You must ignore real-world knowledge. If the text says all doctors are robots, you must treat that as an absolute truth.

2. Logical Puzzles

These involve arranging items or people based on a list of constraints (e.g., “If Sarah sits next to John, and John is not at the end of the table…”).

  • The Rule: Use your whiteboard to draw quick grids or “if/then” chains to visualize the relationships.

3. Interpreting Information

You will be presented with graphs, charts, or maps and asked to identify which statements are supported by the data.

  • The Rule: Look for trends and anomalies. Ensure you aren’t making assumptions that aren’t explicitly proven by the visual.

4. Venn Diagrams

You must either pick the correct diagram that represents a written description or extract numerical data from overlapping circles.

5. Probabilistic Reasoning

These questions involve calculating the likelihood of an event occurring, often involving dice, colored marbles, or medical outcomes.

  • The Rule: Familiarize yourself with basic probability formulas and “Expected Value” logic.

6. Recognizing Assumptions (Strong/Weak Arguments)

You are presented with a “Yes/No” question and four arguments. You must identify which is the strongest argument—the one most relevant to the heart of the issue.

  • The Rule: Avoid “emotional” responses. The strongest argument is always based on objective facts and addresses the prompt directly.

Skills Required for Success

To achieve a high score in Decision Making, you must refine these core competencies:

  • Deductive Reasoning: The ability to take general rules and apply them to specific instances.
  • Data Interpretation: Rapidly extracting meaning from complex visual representations.
  • Critical Objectivity: Separating your personal opinions or outside knowledge from the evidence provided.
  • Calculated Guessing: DM questions are worth varying points (some are “partial credit”). Knowing which questions to spend time on and which to flag is key.

Pro Tip: Use the provided on-screen calculator sparingly. Most “math” in Decision Making is actually testing your logic regarding ratios and percentages, not your ability to do long-form division.

Worksheets

Syllogisms

Worksheet 1

Worksheet 2

Worksheet 3

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