Affiliation:
1. Department of Fundamental Dental and Medical Sciences Kulliyyah of Dentistry International Islamic University Malaysia Kuantan Malaysia
2. Kulliyyah of Dentistry International Islamic University Malaysia Kuantan Malaysia
3. Department of Informatics, Faculty of Information Technology Universitas YARSI Jakarta Indonesia
4. Department of Prosthodontics University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
5. Department of Paediatric Dentistry and Dental Public Health Kulliyyah of Dentistry International Islamic University Malaysia Kuantan Malaysia
Abstract
AbstractPurpose/ObjectivesAdmission into dental school involves selecting applicants for successful completion of the course. This study aimed to predict the academic performance of Kulliyyah of Dentistry, International Islamic University Malaysia pre‐clinical dental students based on admission results using artificial intelligence machine learning (ML) models, and Pearson correlation coefficient (PCC).MethodsML algorithms logistic regression (LR), decision tree (DT), random forest (RF), and support vector machine (SVM) models were applied. Academic performance prediction in pre‐clinical years was made using three input parameters: age during admission, pre‐university Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA), and total matriculation semester. PCC was deployed to identify the correlation between pre‐university CGPA and dental school grades. The proposed models’ classification accuracy ranged from 29% to 57%, ranked from highest to lowest as follows: RF, SVM, DT, and LR. Pre‐university CGPA was shown to be predictive of dental students’ academic performance; however, alone they did not yield optimal outcomes. RF was the most precise algorithm for predicting grades A, B, and C, followed by LR, DT, and SVM. In forecasting failure, LR predicted three grades with the highest recall, SVM predicted two grades, and DT predicted one. RF performance was insignificant.ConclusionThe findings demonstrated the application of ML algorithms and PCC to predict dental students' academic performance. However, it was limited by several factors. Each algorithm has unique performance qualities, and trade‐offs between different performance metrics may be necessary. No definitive model stood out as the best algorithm for predicting student academic success in this study.
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