Author:
Park Hae-Jeong,Kim Sung Huhn,Choi Jae Young,Cha Dongchul
Abstract
AbstractArtificial intelligence (AI) using deep learning approaches the capabilities of human experts in medical image diagnosis. However, due to liability issues in medical decisions, AI is often relegated to an assistant role. Based on this responsibility constraint, the effective use of AI to assist human intelligence in real-world clinics remains a challenge. Given the significant inter-individual variations in clinical decisions among physicians based on their expertise, AI needs to adapt to individual experts, complementing weaknesses and enhancing strengths. For this adaptation, AI should not only acquire domain knowledge but also understand the specific human experts it assists. This study introduces a meta-model for human–machine cooperation that first evaluates each expert’s class-specific diagnostic tendencies using conditional probability, based on which the meta-model adjusts the AI’s predictions. This meta-model was applied to ear disease diagnosis using otoendoscopy, highlighting improved performance when incorporating individual diagnostic characteristics, even with limited evaluation data. The highest accuracy was achieved by combining each expert’s conditional probabilities with machine classification probability, using optimal weights specific to each individual’s overall classification accuracy. This tailored model aims to mitigate potential misjudgments due to psychological effects caused by machine suggestions and to capitalize on the unique expertise of individual clinicians.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC